Daily British Whig (1850), 7 Feb 1922, p. 7

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TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1042, FOR | VALENTINE | Red and Gold Hearts for decorative purposes. Cup Designs, Place Cards, Table Covers and Napkins. Hearts, Arrows and Cupid Cutouts for Dresse es and favors. Streamers, Caps and Decorated Crepe Paper. Everything to make a Valentine Party a suc- cess, Valentines to please everybody at: -- R. Uglow & Co. NICKLE ELECTED MEMBER FOR KINGSTON (Continued received at the from Page 1.) of the British Mr. Nickie had majority, Mr. s called upon for an ad- dress, ar he thankéd all of his workers and supporters for the man- rer in which they stood loyally with him "We know that the contest has been won by our opponents and I accept the verdict of the people We have made substantial gains but not sufficient to win out. We have | reduced a majority of some. 4,200 0 about 600. We have learned some things and ome of these is that we have been too lenient and those who held the whip hand over public tn- stitutions did not come across as we expected, The same was the case with J. M. Campbell. I cannot thank my friends too strongly. They stood by me loyally from start to finish. | Kingston appears to be a Conserva- | office tantal tive city, owing to the fact that we | EVENING | HOURS When your day's labors are over and you sit down to read or sew then is when vou need good sight, which to a great! many people can be had only with the aid of cor-! rect Eye Glasses. Give your eyes the best by having us examine your eyes and make your! glasses, "The Home of Better Sterling Silver Wedding Gifts We have a very choice selec- tion of pieces in Sterling TEA SETS VASES: CANDLE STICKS. COMPORTS. SANDWICH PLATES. BOWLS. BUTTER DISHES. ALMOND DISHES, ETC. Kiwear & d'Esterre JEWELERS 100 Princess Street, Kingston Registered Optometrist 140 Wellingtor St. Opp. Post Office DENTAL PARLORS: 183 PRINCESS STREET TRANSATLANTIC STEAMSHIPS KINGSTON, ONTARIO St. Lawrence Route, Season 1922 Salling Lists Now Ready. C, 8. Kirkpatrick - 3¢ Ciarence Street We specialize on:--Painless Extrac- pe: tion, Latest Treatment of Pyorrhea, X-Ray work. Agent Nm -- We have many pieces of FANCY CHINA Suitable for | BRIDGE PRIZES These are moderately priced, and are well worth seeing. Derby, or the Wonderful Oriflamme Ware. A few Electric Portable Lamps at More 'select' ones can be got in Crown | Clearing Out Prices. Robertson's Limited 73 Princess St. have not taken advantage of our op- portunities and have been too easy | going. I did the best I could, but was deceived by my so-called Con- servative friends, many of whom promised me their support.' Mr. Elliott paid he was extremely grate- | ful for the work of the ladies who did such splendid work. ' "lI want to express my sincere thanks to the British Whig fdr the way it handled the campaigh for | me." Queen's University, too dame | in for special mention as it gave Mr. | Elliott a majority of four. "I hdve | the honor to have carried Queen's, | and I hope to be long spared to be | able in some measure to return my | thanks to the people who stood loy- | ally behind me." Mr. Campbell and | M. Sullivan were both mentioned by | Mr. Elliott for the splendid work | they did in the campaign. Mr. Campbell was called upon to | peak and he expressed regret over | the way things went. "I think that | another time we will do better. The | (Conservative party being in power so | long we had no benefit from the | change that has taken place ,a benefit that we had hoped for from public institutions." M. Sullivan's Remarks. Mr. Sullivan, veteran of the Lib- leral party and one who, through good or ill, has fought manfully for the party candidates, was called on and said: "I can assure you that I had no ambition to make a speech because of the fact that things have not gone my way. I want to give some advice. There are too many policy makers and I want the ladies to learn from the mistakes of the men." Mr, Sullivan told of the re- |sults in the different wards and ex- | dissatisfaction with results in some. ( a bag pole planted in honor of a Con- ervative victory, but that was long ago and it had for years consistently stood with the Liberal party. Syden- ham ward might have done better. [Sydenham ward must have got the Kiwanis Club baskets for they never went into Catamaqui ward, and the only thing we can do is send more baskets into Sydenham ward. concluding, Mr. Sullivan sad: '"The Kingston vote is hived by govern- ment patronage and we took too {much for granted when we expected tec get the benefit of the recent change." | | pressed ! At the Standard Office. | The supporters of Mr. Nickle be- gan to gather outside the Standard rot him, the campaigr waged aga I emerged tri- § He them ir edy and told his wing to this accident be no. demon ation in Turning to men side the office he sim- not going to make turned away deeply I 0 the Election Notes, 1,5 m cast were Tre vote expect The 1 than did t two months ago E OT worka would like to >'s abolished and given a num- the subd ber without a "Well," said a citizen at the Whig bulletin this orning, "you talk ecessary bye-election in cash, It this e city about a COS R has cost more than that, for it cost two people their Hves." REV. THOS. 8. C. MACKLEM Former provost of Trinity College, and now chaplain to the lord bishop of British Honduras. LEADER IN EDUCATION, Sir Gifts to his Country, Writing in the February number | of Everywoman's World, J. A. Me- Neil tells some interesting facts about the life of the late Sir William C. Macdonald, of Montreal, founder of the W. C. Macdonad, Incorporat- led, Tobaeso Comvany, and one of | Mall. There was quite a number of Canada's great pioneer captains of in- dustry and commence. draws attention to the fact that the thing whioh took up 80 much of Sir value to the country, the advance- ment of education, has been almost totally neglected by other chronicl- Willlam Macdonald's Generous | The writer | THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG. -- During February we will offer 20% Discount Shoe Sale ee. tere S---------------------------------- many good things in Footwear at 20% to 339, OFF (Rubber goods excepted) You save at the very least 20% of ALWAYS WATCH OUR WINDOWS, IT PAYS YOU! every dollar you spend, Abernethy's Shoe Store Established 1897. The Unique Grocery and Meat Market is a safe place to do your shop- ing for Groceries, Meats and Provisions of all kinds. SPECIAL THIS WEEK Our own Baking Powder 25¢. large tin. C. H. Pickering's | 490 and 492 Princess St. ! Phone 530. | Ny Sisemammsp LITERARY SOCIETY, In Sydenham High School--Ruttan. | | Collins Wedding in Kingston, | Sydenham, Feb, 4.--On Fr day ternoon, the first public méeting of Fins the high school lite rary society for { Great activit | this term was held in the assembly | Qi ousiders vresent. The president, Re f) bert Cra'g, opened the meeting and | was followed by Miss Anetta Nichol 5, | secretary, who read the minutes of | the last meeting. Robert Shul'z g | thé treasurer's report. Owing to vac- {ancies by resignations two offices in | oe {the society were filled by elecine | | THREE-PIECE SUITS ave ataraqui ward once held | | Charles Sedgewick, pianist, and Rich- ard Foston, histortan. Following the transaction of business, a programe ers. | Over $6,000,000 was given to Mec- | | Gil University proper by the late Sir | | Witiam and an equivalent sum went | Was rendered by members of second to the foundation, equipment ang en- | form, for which James Garvin acted dowment of Macdonald College at St [4s chairman. The programme num- |Anne de Bellevue, a branch of Me- | bers consisted of vocal solos by Miss GH, with three dis"inctive depart-|Jean Gordon, Miss Frances Donolly ments, for the teaching of agricui-|@nd Arthur Walker; reocita'fons by {ture, domestic science and the tramn- | Miss Mildred Barrett and {ing of teachers. No' content with Emmons; piano solo by Miss Mary | this, he. spread his efforts to Ontario | Leech; selections by the S.H.S. or- {and gave $200,000 to the Agricultural |chestra, and choruses by the second | College at Guelph, for the erection of | form. At the conclusion of the pro- two buildings for the teaching of |gramme, Rev. G Stafford, who had domestic science and manual train- | been appointed critic, made a brief | ing respectively. Going further stili, (address. A vote of thanks on behalf {he built and equipped the first con- | of those from outside the school, was |solidated schools in the provinces of (moved by Rev. T. Leech and second- | |Ontario, Nova Scotia, New Bruns-|ed by Mrs. W. S. Gordon, The mar- | wick and Prince Edward Island as | riage took place in Kingston on | demonstrations to the legislativs | Thursday of Fred Donald Ruttan, {bodies of those provinces. He furth- Sydenham, and Miss Ella Collins, |er established man prize funds for | Kingston. The ceremony was per- James | SPECIALS ~--Men"s Gunmetal Lace Bluchers. Men's Brown Calf Lace Bluchers. -Men's Brown and Mahogany Lace Bal- morals; recede toes.- $4.95 ~--Women's High Cut Lace Shoes in Black, Kid and Gunmetal.and Brown Calf, --Women's Oxfords in Black and Brown. $2.99 Allan M. Reid SHOE STORE office shortly after six o'clock. W. F'. Nickle was surrounded by many of the prominent Conservatives. who {had assisted him 4n his campaign, and 'the results were anxiously | watched by all, as at first the Issue | dens, nature study, household sci- iwas very doubtful. However, as lence and ognsolidated schools all more complete returns were received | found permanant places in "he school ithe election of Mr. Nickle was con- |systems of the dominjon. Truly the | sidered safe, and the majority gradu- [good done by Sir William was not |ally increased until it was around | "interred with his bones.' {$00 over the Liberal candidate. ------------ | There was very little enthusiasm | |during the evening. as the appatling SENATOR CONDEMNS | accident dampened the spirits of the | THE EIGHT-HOUR DAY |erowd. Finally, when victory was | { cortain, Mr. Nickle addressed the | crowd on the street from one of the | ! front windows of the Standard office. | France and Economic Prob- |He thanked his supporters for their lems More Difficult. {work on his behalf during the cam- -- London, Feb. 7.-- Writing in the | paign, and remarked that the victory | Revue Des Deux Mondes, Senator | was only made possible by their lcyal and consistent suppont. He | Raphael Levy pronounces a severe | stated that in spite of the vigorous To Stop a Cold in One Day Take | competition in wheat and grain growing. Largely 'hrough his work and in- law, passed in April, 1919. He says: "It has brought about an increase in the cost price of everything, ren- tion of economic problems. France's losses through this law amount to billions of frances yearly, at a time when foreign competition is more serious than ever." ployment of 100,000 additional men of all categories on the French rail- ways. The cost of the railway per- sonnel has increased from 36 to 58 per cent, and moreover, the effic- jency of the railway service has been considerably lessened owing to certi- ficates having been granted to im- perfectly trained drivers. Accidents have increased enormously and the cost of transport augmented, The writer asserts that the pfo- duction in the mines is 20 per cent. less than before the war. France's importation of coal is ten million tons yearly, which, says the senator, could easily be produced from France's own mines. The cost of labor for the mechani- cal industries, says the writer, has increased nearly 50 per cemt., and some works are finding it economi- cally impossible to carry on. Hom. Charles Stewart, minister of the interior, is not to run for a seat in Alberta. x Water always drops from the eaves intq the same old holes. fluence manual training, school gar- | | indictment on the French eight-hour | | An efttempt will be made to re-or-| dering still more difficult the solu- | The law makes necessary the em- | | formed by Rev, F. A. Read, a former | pastor here. Mr. and Mrs. Ruttin | will reside a short distance out of | Sydenham. Some of the out-of-town {guests at the BewwsTovell wedding on Saturday were Rev. Dr. Isaac [Tovell and Miss M. Tovell, Toronto; |H. D. Rogers and Miss Bews, Gana- | noque; Miss Helen Wartman, Toron- to; Mrs. E. B. Lytle, Mrs. Spafford, and Miss Purdy, Kingston. Had Unpleasant Time. | The men employed in the shipyard {and at other work, more or less ex- | pleasant time on Monday morning, | owing to the snow storm. A new match company has invaded i the Canadian field and very shortly | the products of the Canadian Matcn | Company, Limited, of Pembroke, will | be on sade from coast to coast. gantze the Arnprior board of trade. Gas, Indigestion, Stomach Misery --""Diapepsin" "Pape's Diapepsin" 'really does' put bad stomachs in order-- 'really does' overcome indigestion, dyspep- sia, gas, heartburn and sourness in five minutes -- that -- just that -- makes Pape's Diapepsin the largest selling stomach regulator 'A the world. If what you eat ferments {n+ to stubborn lumps, you belch gus and eructate sour, undigested food and acid; head is dizgy and aches, re- member the moment "Pape's Diapep- sin" comes in contact with the stomach all such distress vanishes. It's truly astomishing--almost mar- velous--and the joy is its harmless ness, A large sixty-cent case of Pape's Diapepsin is worth its weight in gold to men and women who can't get their stomachs regulated. It belongs in your home--should al- ways be kept handy in case of a sick, sour, upset stomach during the day or at night. It's the most efficient agtactd and stomach regulator in the world. | - ARE SPRING STYLES { Paris Gets a New Sensation as the Backless Waist . Appears. Paris, Feb. 7.--The return of | threq piece suits is the most striking | sensation of the spring and summer | Styles now being exhibited by Paris- | lan dressmakers They are expected |to supercede robes for afternoon wear and tea dancing. Models who | removed the jackets revealed blou | {or armless and backless vests, tha | gas | latter being extremely audacious. Jean Patou, a leading mode ore- | ator, sprang a surprise by practicaily | abolishing belts, whioh heretofore | habe been universally worn with {chemise robes. M. Patou introduced | another daring novelty by showing skirts which were sphit straight up | from the hem to the low waist line {dn fromt, squarely in the middle, re- | vealing underskirts of contrasting | colors, usually a light shade, S:artl- Ing effects were produced durmg walking when a well moulded limb draped with fllmy crepe, protruded through the serge split. + Innovation sleeves were noted, , be- Ing cone shaped and draped with tulle of contrasting colors. The shortest skirts were at leas: | ankle length, while the evening Billions of Francs Are Lost to! posed to the elements, had a very un- | dresses almost touched the floor. Sof: | materials Invariably are used, giving | the skirts an appearance of tightness | when still but revealing widness in | movement. The evening dresses are | more discreet although some models {are entirely backless and the extreme- ly low walstiines this year permits | cutting away to an alarming extent. | Black has been discarded and | white, beige, yellow nauve and cycla- | men are popular instead. | The Canadian imterests of the Al- len Theatres, Limited, are taken over by the Famous Players Canadian Corporation. Thomas Gravelle, a Hamilton po- liceman, who had a still, was fined $500. He also loses his job-- BIG CLEARING FURNITURE SALF, FOUR EXTRA SPECIALS ! Leaders in Chesterfields and Chesterfield Suites: y will transpire this week at:-- JAMES REID Phone 147. We store purchases and pay Freightaf NO BRANCHES. Demands Civil Trial. i Mexico City, Feb. 7.--Gen. Nor= boto C. Olvera, military commander under Carranza, who was arrested ca Friday, is being held in jail pending * his appeal for trial by civil court rae ther than by court-martial. Olvera as- serts he retired from the army months ago and that the charges of conspiracy agains: him should be dealt with by the civil institution. £ Below 500 fathoms' depth in the ocean there is said to be no bight, OUCH! HY BACKI RUB ~~ LUMBAGO PAIN. AWAY St. Jacob's Oil stops any pain, when your back is sore and lame, of lumbago, sciatica or rheumatism has you stiffened up, don't suffer! - Get & small trial bottle of old, honest Jacob's Oil at any drug store, pour little in your hand, and rub it right on your aching back; and by the time you count fifty the soreness and lames | ness is gone. Don't stay crippled! This sooths ing, penetrating oil needs to be used only once. It takes the pain right out and ends the misery. It is m cal, yet absolutely harmless, doesn't burn. the skin, v Nothing else stops lumbago, scia« tica, backache or rheumatis: promptly. It never disappoints! PILES Quickly Relieved New Treatment Hrings Relief in Five Minutes or Money Back. The maddening {tching and burning: and sting---the theob--ithe quickly relieved and should soon di pear after using Geero Wormwood Balm This pleasant healing and pain lieving Wormwood Compound and cools the minute you put it on brings sure and lasting comfort wimp. because it quickly reduces inflai tion and allays the congestion or bi pressure which causes the pain. For best results cover the parts wit a ho: caning tecwel for about ff minut Then apply Geero Wor woud Balm as directed on the pao Any good druggist can supply you sure and ge: the genuine. TEN YEARS AGO. Reiziopolis had applied for admis sion to the jundor intercollegiate rugby series. Since "Alle" Pierce left the Queen's teams in rugby and hockey they have been losing rather gom- sistgntly, The men cutting ice on the har- bor are on strike for twenty cents an hour instead of fifteen cents, The mew wing at the general hos- pital will likely be started in the spring according to the governors. Ross Pringle, Amherst Island, ie stopping here a short time om his way to Calgary to take a position. | TWICE TOLD TALES News of Kingston ' TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO, Wm, Harty, Jr, is having hai luck with his hockey playing. the accidents seem to come his Froptenacs defeated Peterboro 1 to 5 in the intermediate series of h: Ontario hockey, T. A. Rogers, Toronto, will duct two weeks evangelistical vices here for tha Y.M.C.A Dr. Hamilton, Kingston, has © ed an office in Erinsville J. Sinclair, a datry school stu seeks a match game of checkers any local expert. Dr. Russell, superintendent the Hamilton asylum, is the guest Dr. C. K. Clarke, Rockwood. Lap n---are Sd A

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