WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 25, ae FOR CHOICE MEATS and FIRST QUALITY WESTERN BEEF TRY B. V. McGeein 282 PRINCESS STREET PHONE 1182 NOTICE | | | { Churetea, and | ch o TR roc s of all denomi- salons will be plied FREE oF ARGE one eve SHAR with team and Berar for driv- ing party. | Kingston Transfer Co. THE HORRORS. OF INDIGESTION Relieved by "Fruif-a-tives" the Fruit Medicine Indigestion, Weak Digestion or partial digestion of food, is one of the most serious of present-day complaints--because it is responsible for many serious troubles. Those who suffer with Indigestion,. almost invariably are troubled with | Brean Palpitation of the Heart, and excessive Nervousness, "Fruit-a-tives' will always relieve Indigestion because these tablets strengthen the stomach muscles, increase the flow of"the digestive Juices and correct Constipation, which usually accompanies Indigestion. 50c a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size 25¢. At dealers or sent postpaid by Fruit-a-tives Limited, Ottawa. -- Kingston and Vicinity DR.A.W. WINNETT DENT. AL SURGEON, Corner of Johnson and Wellington Streets Phone 368 | Dr. Waugh Dentist 106 Wellington St. Angrove's Repairs : 'Scales, Talking Machines, Bicycles, | Baby Carriages, Lawn Mowers, etc. | We do repair work right and guar-/ antec satisfaction. | 197 Wellington Street. WATTS People's Florist 177 'Wellington street, Fresh flowers and plants daily Funeral designs, and wedding bouquets to order. Phone 1763. Res, 1137, Phone 256 W. R McRae & Co. GOLDEN LION BLOOK. COAL Choicest quality of Scranton Ooal. No other kind 'sold by us. BOOTH & 00. Grove Inn Yard Phone 183 PIANO TUNING Plane Tuning and Repairing. Also Organ Work. All work guaranteed. PETER D. BROWN 12 Markland St. Phone 2397Tm. | 21 Main Street. USE SLOAN T0 WARD OFF PAIN 1 1 ITTLE aches grow into big pains unless warded oft by an i pein | tion of Sloan's, heumatism, neuralgia, stiff joints, lame back won't | Beht long against Sloan's Liniment, For more than fo rs Sloan's Liniment has Reiped Yhousands, the world over. You won't be an excep tion. It certainly does produce results, It penetrates without rubbing. Ki this old family friend always Al instant use. Ask your ad At all druggists--35c, 70c, $1.40, ade in Canada. @ Sloas a BUILDING ? REPAIRS OR SLTERATIONST Estimates given by O. Aykroyd & Son Fine for Lumbago Musterole drives pain away and brings in ite place delicious, soothing comfort. Just rub it in gently, Itis a clean, white ointment, made with oil of mustard. It will not 'blister like the old-fashioned mustard plaster. Get Musterole today at your drug store. Phone 1670. [er houses Furniture--Freight--Baggage TRANSFER Phone 1776J S85. WHITEMAN 210 QUEEN STREET GET IT REPAIRED |* Sewing Machines, Phonographs, Guns, Rifles repaired and refitted. Parts supplied. Saws filed, knives, scissors and edge tools groumd. Locks repaired, Keyy fitted to ail kinds of locks. All makes of Lawn Mowers sharpened and re- paired. We can R zepaiz anything that is repalrab. J. M. PATRICK 149 Sydenham S Kingston " Phone Soved. FOR SALE Double stone dwelling, three storey, large lot; 1 extra lot. Good barn. Rents for $44 per month. Price $4,500. Real Estate and Insurance 80 Brock Street Phone 424 DID YOU EVER 'Wagstaf's Bramble Jelly. 'We also have a full line of other relaible makes of Marma- {ades, Jam and Jellies for sale Al BON MARCHE GROCERY Cor. King and Earl Streets License No. 3-2T149 Phone 1844. STOVES Quebec ana Sire King Heaters and Gag ka Nickle rp awe Basins and Tollets Lumber, Cement and Corrugatcd ron. 1 L Cohen & Co. 275 Ontario St. Phones 836, 837 EVERSHARP PENCILS REPAIRED We are equipped to make apy repairs to above pencils. We carry a supply of parts, Prompt service, J. R. C. Dobbs & Co. 41 Clarence Street, Kingston, The Mutual Life of Canada This is a Mutual Company, The policy holders own the Company entirely. There are no stockholders to share in the profits; all profits go to the policy holders, who therefore - receive insufance: at net cost. This is the only Mutual Com- pany in Canada. It is 50 years old, and has 225 million dol- lars' Insurance in force. "Be a Mutualist." S. Roughton District Manager The Mutual Life of Canada 60 Brock Streeg RINGSTON Phone 610. THE DAY BRITISH WHIC. Concern Your Purse, store advertisements always y store news that immediately ern you end your family purse. ' The 3 A Vagrant Dog. A vagrant headquarters on Tuesday. fo'lowed a citizen around the the citizen took him to the po tion. The dog is now at Lie lup" awaiting an owner, y and sta- ock- { Taken To Brockville, Chief of Police Burke, Brockviile, was in the city on Tuesday and re- turned with Fred Sutton, arrested {here at the request of the Brockville police on a charge of securing money | {under false pretences, Proceeds of Dance $58.75. The proceeds of the recent dance {of the 8.C.R. were $53.75. Of that amount $30 was donated to t} {Child's Welfare Station on Barrie street, and the balance was handed | over to Mrs, W. H. Gimblett for poor relief work. They Are Interesting. Patrons will find advertised stores interesting. They will find those stores give best service also, and are |in every way more satisfactory. * Pupils Laid Up. Quite a number of schobl pupiis | are suffering {rem severe colds and as a result have to remain Indoors. | On Monday six or seven pupils in one lot the junicr grades at Victoria !schaol were sent -'2ome as their | | coughing interfered with the study in | the classes. Looking for his Money. A Kingstou man Was kind enough | or. Monday to pay a sum of money for a young man who was in 'rouble in a police court case. The young man | was later on taken into custody on another charge and now the Kingston | | man | his money back. It was certainly a | hard blow foi {a good act. our Annual Sale, Before stocktaking we haev de- is to put on sale our entire stock | ready-to-wear | of ordered clothing, | clothing and Gents' Furnishings a' {prices that will meet or beat any oth- | in the trade. Prevost, Brock street. To Take Action, The finance committee of Ganan- oque council will look into the mat-| ter of uncollected taxes. Collector Pratt stated there was about $9,000 {outstanding for 1921. As many were out of work the taxes could not be paid as promptly as in other years. Clerk Sampson stated that all "out- standing taxes for some five or six years past amounted on Dec. 15th to {around $19,000, Removing Surplus Snow. The surplus snow on the city streets is being drawn off by a num- ber of workmen employed by the city, thys removing this serious hin- drance to traffic. two weeks, the snow has been piling | Te 7 COLDS Grip, Influenza, Humphreys' Romeo. Med! St, New York and at all Drug 5 > 9 Throns Country Stores Dizzy Spells Are Usually Due, to Constipation" When you are constipat- ed, there is not enough lubricant produced by your system to keep the food waste soft. Doctors rescribe Nujol because ts action is so close to this natural lubricant. Nujol is a lubricant--not a medicine or laxative-- so cannot gripe. Try it MADE IN n SERA IN 0. une -- AO LEOWARD, TOGA. LY, ne, phys " wes locked up at police | i'he canine | is wonder'ng when he will get] a person trying to do | Durnig the past | '|end had his right leg broken mid- up and has been a decided nuisance chairmanship of Rev. John Lyons, | to drivers of motors and sleighs. On|of Lyn, the rural dean. Monday afternoon, the workmen The following officers were elected | were using a plow to break up the | | for the ensuing year: frozen section underneath the loose | President--G. Elmer | | Brockville. er eee | Vice-presidents--Mrs, Tett, Honor Popular Couple. {ford Mills; A. E. Mooney, On Jan. 11th, Mr. and Mrs. T. C.|downe, Maloney, Deseronto, celebrated their | Secretary-treasurer--Mrs. |silver wedding, (twenty-fifth anni-|Read, Brockville versary) .by giving a euchre party| Committee-- Missionary, Mrs. K.| {to about tbrty friends. Mr. and| { Jacobs, Elgin: font roll; Miss E. Rey- | Mrs. Maloney were completely sur-|nolds, Brockville; Sunday school by! prised when in the course of . the post, Miss H. A, Donovan, Portland; evening, they were presented with (home department, Miss F. Scovel, | \a set of silver knives, forks and | Athens; Bible class, William Chris-| | spoons, |tie, Brockville; teachers' training, | ER Rev. B, O. Boyle, Athens. Tho Officers Chosen. Delegates to synod convention-- | At the annual meeting of South | Mrs. Johnston, Mrs. Charles Read, ! { Renfrew Farmers, ' R. G. Wilson, | Miss Reynolds, Miss Donovan, Mrs. | party candidate at the last federal |Scovell and Dr. Bird, of Gananoque election, was re-elected president for a third time; J. H. Zummach, sec- a or oom, nee | A golden wedding was celebrated {at the home of Mr. and Mrs. John N ewer i- | irs. B. Siewert, woman Gir | cotter, Richaiond, on Dec. 20h or. | ceremony which joined the lives of this fine couple was performed at the home of her brother, the late TL rm a James Fitohott, Hawley, by the Rev. p . Bl . : Nr ; Walter F um Heads Post |p avid Wilson, the only surviving | At the annual meeting held re-| ) | cently of the John C. Londraville {¥ Hitese pelng Mrs, Richard Cronk- | Post, American Legion, Cape Vine- [3 °F a Saver, Who was ig pres ent, N.Y., the following officers were | | happy grrr 1 RORY, boon thei : elected: Walter F. Blum, post com- | 1 |mander; F. H. Plgden, 'first vice- fom? ass re Stasstien © iy {commander; J. A. Forbes, second | 516 twenty grandchildren and one | | {ice commander; G. S. Jones, third great-grandohild. They = received vice-commander; J. Schuyler Lowel sine valuable presents and a well | {post adjutant; Frank Bernhardt, |gyjeq purse from those present and | | post treasurer; Rev. J. L, Tierney, lalso her brothers, who- were unable | chaplain, {to attend, one, Isaac, on the old | |homestead, Hay Bay, on account of 1 Deaths at Clayton N.Y. sickness; and the others on account ! Mrs. Elsie C. McCaru aged |5¢ distance, David in California; | seventy-six years, died at Natural | {Joseph in Washington, and Robert | | Bridge, N.Y.,"and was buried from |in Milwaukee. All the guests, thirty | her home at "Clayton, N.Y., on Mon- |i, number, join in wishing Mr. and day. She was for about thirty years |\rg | Kellar many more years of | {in the post office. She was a daugh- happy wedded life. ter of the late Elias Davis, Mrs." Angeline Minor Crowe, aged | seventy-nine years, died at Clayton, N.Y., on Jan. 21st, after a long f{ll- ness. Two sons and a daughter sur- vive, anc Bed- Lans- i Charles Golden Wedding. | rector; | rector; James Ferguson, Adamston land H. J. Chapeskie, Barry's Bay, { members of executive, | You can alwayys depend upon the | {enmity of your enemies, but there | are times when you cannot depend | | on the friendship of your friends. | HEAD and NOSTRILS CLOGGED UP | BREATHE. Frankford Exhibition. Frankford fair this year will he | | greater and better than ever. The | following officers and directors were | elected: 3. C, Stickle, president; R. | | T. Dunlop; 1st vice-president; Fred | When you -become all¥choked up! | Terry, 2nd vice-president; Fred Pol- |and stuffed up with a cold your head | | lard, Jr., secertary-treasurer; direz-|becomes thick, the nostrils become so | | tors, @. 'B. Mott, W. E. Mills, W. |clogged up you can hardly breathe, a | |B. Windover, W. Wallace, W. Scol*, feeling of weight or oppression in the | lc. L. Fox, C. H. Ketcheson, S. M. [chest and the cough rasps and tears | Nicholson, N. McMurter, G. B. Rosa, | Yur lungs and bronchial tubes. 7 H SCARCELY COULD Roy Harry, R. F, Turley, T. H. Ket- This is the time to take cheson. DR. WOOD'S NORWAY PINE SYRUP { There is no remedy to equal it for clearing up the cold, making the Hines. the dont. secartod of oe] BL oa, ooneng The Dee |and soothing and healing the lungs | Mary Ann Goodison, native of Aug- | and bronchial tubes. usta, and a resident of Brockville tor | Mrs. Edward Kincade, 60 Bryden | a little over a year, The late Miss |St., St. John, N. B., writes: --"I wish Goodison was born at North Augus-|t0 express my hearty thanks to your ta seventy-five years ago, daughter |Yaluable remedy Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup and what good it did me. of the late Mr. and Mrs. Luke Good- | | fon: I contracted a severe cold, { She resided practically all her| |the like I never had, my head and | life in Augusta and was well known | | nostrils were so clogged up I could | and highly esteemed. Bhe was a | get no vent, and could scarcely get | Methodist in religion. | my breath. I tried remedy after | remedy until at last I thought 1 would try "Dr. Wood's." After the | first dose I felt relief, and by the time | { the bottle was finished I was all bet- | ter. I will always keep it in the | house." Price 35¢c. and 60c. a bottle; put up | only by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Taronto, Ont. WHEN STOMACH IS ACID, GASSY A Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablet Bweetens and Settles Those Sour Risings,' Belchings and Gassiness That Follow Eating. No matter how distressed after eating, Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets At the General Hospital, Brock- The Late Miss Mary 'Ann Goodison. | before things get to be too serious. | | ! The Late Milton Olark Jackson. On Jan, 13th, there passed away at the residence of his son-in-law, (J: Cline Browne, Toronto, a former | esteemed resident of Napanee, in the person of Milton Clark Jackson, in his seventysfourth year, son of the late Dorland Jackson and Malinda Scott-Jackson, whose families were among the early U.E.L. settlers of the county. The late Mr. Jackson resided in Napanee until twenty-one years ago, when he with his family moved to Pittsburg, Penn., later re- turning to Toronto, where he resid- ed until his death. Right Leg Broken. On Wednesday, Henry Goodwin, an employee of G. A. Burgess. Carleton Place, met with an accident way between the ankle and knee. Early in the afternoon Mr. Good- win accompanied by Andrew Her- ron, left the Arklan farm to go to Mr, Burgess' bush, at the 7th line of Beckwith, where logging opera- tions ate being carried on, to bring in a load. In loading Mr. Goodwin had occasion to step the horses for- ward and his leg was caught be- tween the end of the skid and a bunk on the sleigh, resulting in a clean % break. make your stomach feel good. It : settles down; sweetens, goes about its business of digesting the food and you feel content and active. Eat what you like, turkey dressing, plum pudding, rich soup, sausage, baked beans and so on. You may go the limit provided you always follow with a Stnart's Dyspepsia Tablet. Get a 60 cent box at any drug store to-day and test your eating abilities. Spoke on "True Greatness." Rev. A, F. Brown was the speaker at the men's bible class at the Y. M. C. A. on Monday evening and gave a stirring address on "True Greatness." The speaker reviewed the lives of a number of grea: men, among thess being that of David Livingstone, "the humble weaver who rose high in the ranks of the nation," and whose deeds will always live. He appealed to the young men to strive to leave some heritage that would live oa long after they had passed along. and stated that it was possible for even the humblest to make his ocon- tribution to his day and generation. A vote of thanks was 'endered to the speaker, whose words were in- deed food for thought among the young men in the audience. The re- marks of Mr. Brown will make a splendid background for a series of biographical addresses which will pe Johnston, || ANTARACITE BRIQUETS Hard Coal Screenings pressed into moulds about the size of a hen's egg, make a very satisfactory fuel for stoves, heat- ¥ ers and furnaces, \ We have a popular size; about equal to large Chestnut or small Stove Coal. It is clean, burns to ashes, S. ANGLIN & CO. Woodworking Factory and Lumber Yards, Bay and Wellington Btrects, KINGS10N, Out. Office Phone 66. Factory Phone 14105. no clinkers. You Will Enjoy For a meal you will enjoy. Visit our Restaurant, and you will not be disappointed: Our Service is exceleny ant our prices are right. GRAND CAFE PETER LEG PROPRIETOR Open From 8 am, Two Doors ABove Opera House 222 Princess Street to 2 am, A Nom m-------- ro 1/8 FURS Gourdier's BROCK STREET, \ -- A A ry a! (= ---- WINTER VERCOATS MEN and YOUNG MEN'S NEW MODELS -- BEST VALUES $25.00, $28.00 $35.00, $38.00 TWEDDELL'S 131 Princess St. (One door below Randolph Hotel) & > BED SPREADS AT SPECIAL PRICES Crochet Spreads for single or three $3. 75 and $4.00. dered, at $3.50, $3.75 $4.00. Colored Spreads, pretty patterns, war- " ranted fast colors, at $3.50 each. W hite Satin Spreads, best English makes for single or double beds at $5.00, $6.00, $7.50, $8.00 and $10.00. Embroidered Irish Lawn S tiful designs at $12.00, $14. eads. beau- , $15.00. given during the future meetings. Workers in Sunday School. The Rural Deanery of Leeds, with! Sunday school workers from many af oihe SET Sr Store, Ceo, Ltd, Sargeat's Drug Store, of the parishes in the deanery, met in joint session at Athens under the W. N. Linton & Co. The Waldron Store. d [ quarter beds at $2.00, $2.50 each. Crochet Spreads, extra large sizes, splendid wearing qualities at $3.00, $3.50, Dimity and P.K. Spreads, casily laun- . Phone 191.