Daily British Whig (1850), 8 Feb 1922, p. 7

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---- | THE DAILY B"ITISH WHIG. : ¥ WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1922, re ----------" er -------- SUIT SALE r= nn DEATH RESULTED THE AWOL STATENENT | FROM ACCIDENT © the Mutual Life of Canada - Has Just Been Pub- LAS HR SN J © Ww NOW ON All our Suits are reduced One-third Off. Blue 'and Blacks $30.00 Suits for .............. $20.00 $35.00 Suits for .............. $23.50 $38.00 Suits for .....}........ $25.50 $40.00 Suits for . ............. The cloth, style and fit are the very latest and are tailored by Semi-Ready, George VanHorne's 213 Princess Street. Phere 362w. included. $26.75 Ad 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 iyour eyes the best by 'having us examine your | eyes and make your glasses, 340 Wellington St. Opp. Post Office Le TRANSATLANTIO STEAMSHIPS *The Home of Better Glasses" Sterling Silver Wedding Gifts We have a very choice selec- tion of pieces in Sterling-- THA SETS VASES. CANDLE STICKS. COMPORTS. SANDWICH PLATES, BOWLS. BUTTER DISHES. ALMOND DISHES, ETC. Registered Optometrist St. Lawrence Route, Season 1932 Salling Lists Now Ready, 0. 8. Kirkpatrick Agent « « 36 Clarence Street 183° PRINCESS STREET KINGSTON, ONTARIO We specialize on:--Painless Extrac. tion, Latest Treatment of Pyorrhea, X-Ray work. We have many pieces of FANCY CHINA Suitable for BRIDGE. PRIZES These are moderately priced, and are well worth seeing. More 'select' ones can be Derby, or the Wonderful Ware. got in Crown iflamme A few Electric Portable Lamps at Clearing Out Prices. | -- Women's --Men's Gunmetal Lace Bluchers. ~ =~Men"s Brown Calf Lace Bluchers. ~ ~--Men's Brown and Mahogany Lace Bal- morals; recede toes. 8 $4.95 High Cut Lace Shoes Kid and Gunmetal and Brown cg | ~--Women's Oxfords in Black and Brown. 'Finding of Coroner's Jury in Inquest into the Love Tragedy. "We find that Isaac H. Love came {to bis death ag the result of an ac- cident riding when the axle broke at the | corner of Barrie street and Raglan rod at 5.50 p.m. on Monday." This {Was the verdict of the coroner's jury at the inquest into the death of Isaac H. Love, who with his wife was kill- | od when riding to the poll on Pine | Street to vote in the by-election, Dr. D. E, Mundell, coroner, pre- the jury were: J. F. Sow- , A. Tug- | | | { F. Beaudry, Mer, W. H. +» 0. V. Bartels, After viewing the body of the de- ceased, Isaac H. Love, the inquest into whose death covered the death {Of his wife, the evidence was taken. iT. J. Rigney, K.C., represerited the | Conservative party and W. M. Nickle |Tepresented Stuart Patterson, the | taxi driver of the ill-fated automo- jbile, Dr. L. J Austin, surgeon, | Queen's University, described the in- {Jurtes to the deceased at the time 10f his arrival at the General hospital | and stated that death was due to a | fracture at the base of the skull and | compression of the brain, | Sergt. William K. Wood, C.A.P.C., | M.D. No. 3, was a witness to the ac- cident. He was engaped shovelling hig aid Ik at the corner of Barrie plreat, I saw the car approaching, coming from the direction of Prin- {cess gtreet," sald he. There was a {truck stalled at the corner and the {driver of the car swerved out to pass jaround it, but instead of doing so i his car ran toward the curb, the right wheel broke off and ran into a vacant lot while the car crossed the side- walk and crashed into a tree, The driver did all he could to turn the { oar back into the centre of the road Witness said the car was going fast "probably at forty mtles an hour." He was positive that the wheel broke off at the curb end expressed the opindon that the truck being stalled at the cormer caused the car to swerve and thus caused the accident. Stuaat Patterson, driver of the car told of driving Mr. and Mrs. Love to the 'poll on Pine street to vote. It was about 5.50 pom. At the commer Of Barrie etreet end Raglan road was a truck at the corner and he swerved out a Mttle to pass it and make the turn. As he did so the right wheel flew off the car and he was unable to control it to bring it back and #t ran on to the sidewalk and crashed into a tree. He got out and helped to pick up Mr, and Mrs. Love emd the lttle girl who were hanging out of the car, the doors of wihich were smashed. Asked as to what speed he was making Mr. atterson said he was go- ing at about twenty miles per hour. He did not exceed that. Questioned by Mr. Rigney, witness said he went over the same road perhaps ten times thet afternoon amd the truck was not at the corner on the previous * |madns of Mrs. Morton, who died at After the conclusion of the case the members of the jury contributed their fee to a fund for the benefit of little Reta Love, left an orphan by the tragedy. The Bahama Islands number 29. HEAD and NOSTRILS CLOGGED UP COULD SCARCELY BREATHE. When you become all choked up and stuffed up with a cold your head b thick, the BOS Is Become so cl up you can a ow if weight or oppression in the chest and the cough rasps and tears your lungs and bronchial tubes. This is the time to take DR. WOOD'S NORWAY PINE SYRUP before things get to be too serious. ohare.lY ho 1emedy. to squal 1 fer clearing up the cold, making breathing easy, loosening the phlegm and soothing and healing the lungs and bronchial tubes. A Mrs. Edward Kincade, 60 Bryden to the car in which he was | lished. The 52nd annual statement of the | business of the Mutual Life of Can- ada has just been published, and the policyholders may well congratulate themselves on the resulis of the! | year's operations, | | Surplus earnings have been the! {largest in the history of the comp-| |eny, and when we remember what | {a record the Mutual Life bas already | |ach.eved this statement cannot fail| {to be impressive. The business is now more. than| {$228,000,000, having increased by! | $22,000,000 during the year. Dut [the amount of business written, al- | | though satisfactory, is less import- | {ant than the financlal results attain- led. Surplus 1s mainly acquired | [through the operation of three tae-| | tors, a low expense ratio, high inter-| |est earnings and low mortality. Now | lt happened that in 192( all these | factors operated to produce maxi-| {mum results. The expense ratio, | You save at the very I 20% Discount Sh During February we will offer many good things in Footwear at 20% to 339, OFF (Rubber goods excepted) every dollar you spend. Abernethy's ALWAYS WATCH OUR WINDOWS. IT PAYS YOU! least 20% of Shoe Store {that 1s the ratio of expense to in-| [come, fell from $20.13 per cent. to| |18.60 per cent, This means that {the company's affairs have been | economically handled. Established 1897. -------- NOTES FROM WELLIN GTON David Vanderwood Passed Away Fol. lowing Attack of Heart Failure. Wellington, Feb. 8.--David Vand: erwood, a highly respected resident of this place, died on Thursday, fol- lowing an attack of heant trouble, He is. survived by his wife end four children. He wes a man of stirling character, and was well liked by all his acquaintances. Mrs, Frank Young is. suffering from cancer, and is ma serious condition. Mrs. W. J. Lufl- man, who suffered an attack of pnen- monia, is slowly recovering. The ro- |of securities the company handles, | is a safe place to do your shop- {to be incorrect, and tha disburse- | 490 and 492 Princess St. Phone 530. basis, makes this result all the more | company this year has earned, Mr. and Mrs. Everett Orser will Canada is in a stronger position to- Kirkpatmick. Mrs, McCoy has been a wonderful year for the mamoth dce banks. The comoert given achieved a remarkable record in this ly married, arrived home with his here in 1920, arrived home on Sawur- at his daughter's, Fred Amins, aged |this average interest rate is excep- | ing for Groceries, Meats and | ments for death claims during 1021 three potent factors at work to in-| interesting, because the whole of the BEE $46.47, as against $38.67, in the pro-| leave for Rainey River soon to ro- day than it has ever been before, and x and Mrs. Frank- Wanmamaker arriv- policyholders of this popular Cana- in the M. E. church by Mies Turte respect, bride on Wednésday last. Some of day morning looking hale apd seventy-six years, He came out from fs] % The Rush for Bargains "Grows" in Reid's BIG CLEARING FURNITURE SALE ~ FOUR EXTRA SPECIALS! Leaders in Chesterfields and Chesterfield Suites, Great activity will transpire this week at:-- JAMES REID Phone 147. We store purchases and pay freights. NO BRANEHES. LATE THOMAS CRAWFORD A Resident of Wolfe Island----Cheese Factory Meeting Wolfe Island, Feb. 7.~Thomas Crawford passed away on Sunday af- ter a Jingening {liness. He is surviv- ed by his mother, two sisters, who reside fn Watertown, N.Y., and two brothers, Ernest fn Buffalo, N.Y., and Joho, Montreal. His funeral took, place on Tuesday morning at 9 o'clock to the chunch of the Sacred Heart where a requiem mass was sung by Rev. Fr. Fleming. The re- days, it remadned ly tippler to grace grace the police cel one was gathered morndng, and for eev amused himself in one of the cells by The investments were so carefully - | placed 'that the interest earnings | Th U G (have risen from 6.41 per cent. to G.| € nique rocery {60 per cent. Considering the variety | and Meat Market | tionally good. The third feature is | | notable, because intelligent observ- | lers had predicted a heavy mortality ||| Provisions of all kinds. {in the year immediately following:| SPECIAL THIS WEEK {the war. That forecast has proven | Our own Baking Powder 25¢. large tin, were only 41 per cent of the amount | ° . 9 that the standard tables of mortality might have led them tio expect. | C: H. Pickering S Thus we have in the experience of 'the Mutual Life during the past year [| crease the profits of the company by the largest amount that has ever been earned in ths fifty-two years of beneficient work, The company being established on a purely mutual | surplus is used either to reduce pre-| miums, to increase the amount of the insurance or is paid in cash, The statement shows that for every $1,000 of invested assets, the here of the death of Harry Lane, of San Francisco. Mr. Lane was a Wol- ceding year, a truly astonishing re-| [ington boy, and the son of Mr. any sult. The assets amount to $48,-|/M™. J. K. Lane. He visited his 211,203.98, having increased over | Mother, brother and sisters last fall. the preceding year by $5,363,925.73. x By every test the: Mutual Life of side. Miss Louise Fulford has ro- turned to her home In Brockville, at- ter a wigit here with friends. Miss this is saying a good deal, Yor every Lilian Green left on Wednesday for gne of its fifty-two years has 'wi:- Ivanhoe fait M Wellington hessed steady: progress; not only in]. = %0 iV, ns. financial standing, but also in the ex- tent of the company's operations, It ed home from Trenton on Monday last. They were taking medical treatment and are much tmproved. dian Company. " , Many people from far and mesr are The real test of a life insurance almost daily visitors here to view "he company operating on the participat- ing plan, is its surplus earnings from year to year, and the Mutual has land Prof. Staples, of Belleville, on Wednesday night was a success in every way. The proceeds in aid of the W.M.S. amounted to $3. Garrold Ingram, who was mecont- his friends were invited in on Sat- unday evening to spend a social ev- ening with them. Gillis Ingram, who has been travelling a good deal in the western provinces since leaving hearty. Edward Stubbs and daugh- ters, Marjorie, Flint, Mich., and her sister, Mrs. John White, of Madoc, visited Mr. and Mrs. Walter Boyle. Walter Thompson died on Fridhy last England 'forty-seven years ago. Claude Smith, barber, went to To- ronto last week to better his condi- tion, but returned home with the re- port "nothing doing." Mrs. Thomas Woods, were taken to Belleville 'for interment. Mis. Zu- fell, who is spending the winter with her son in Consecon, visited some of her friends here. Word was received shown arriving at the gates of i shouting at the top of ds voloe. ive very encouraging reports. 'The township of Edwardsburg Tost a highly respected resident Mast Sun- day in the person of Mrs. Patrick McBlen. She is survived by two dan- ghters, Mrs. John MoCarmey, Press cott, and Mrs. A. Knight, Johnstown. | TWICE TOLD TALES News of Kingston TEN YEARS AGO, The city property committes fixes $10,000 'ag the sum necessary to heat the city buildings properly. Verona defeated Harrowsmith in the first game of the Edwards Cup series, ' | o£ Ray Marchand ts playing a sou. tional game of hockey in the nets for Cleveland, J. B. Walkem, K.C., was elected chairman of the Board of Education. The annual business meeting of Chalmers Charch congregation was largely attended. 'The Anglican Synod's committess and Montreal Forwarding Co., by his sup port. Lennox and Addington council has voted $400 for distribution emong its poorer schools, SCARETS 10* For Gonstipated Bowels-- Bilious Liver The nicest cathartic-laxative to phy- tonight wi ll empty yonr Lo'vels come sic your bowels when you have, pletely by morn Headache * Billousness : Colds Indigestion Dizziness Sour Stomach - Te or grips Oil and box. ¥ is candy-like Cascarets. One or two

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