Daily British Whig (1850), 15 Jan 1924, p. 7

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

| Drs. Nash & Renton "Gl -SCARAMOUCHE By SABATINEL «= Photoplay edition--illustrated with scenes from the photoplay. Now 75¢. / R. Uglow & Co. Keep Jack Frost Away WITH AN ELEC- TRIC HEATER Only the best in stock --Westinghouse, Ma- jestic, National, Equator, Graham Electric Princess St." Phone 1944 | well Pencils 25% oft Buy to-day Dr. Waugh | DENTIST 106 Wellington St. Phone 256, Kinnear & d'Esterre JEWELERS, Princess Street, Kingston | DENTISTS _J93 PRINCESS ST., KINGSTON ? a.m. to 6 p.m. by appointment. GAS--X RAY. CHATEAU Phope. S00 WE NEVER CLOSE Live or Dead Storage " The trial of the Home Bank di- rectors and officlals was Monday postponed for another month, { Open Stock Dinnerware Weareploased to tell you that our | Annesley Pattern made by Johnson Brothers is now complete in all articles. Those who have been waiting to fill in their sets should call or "phone at once and not be disappointed, as this is one of our best sellers. ¥ Robertson's Limited 738 Princess St. Men's Gunmetal and Mahogany Brown "Bluchers and Bals, with Rubber Heels. Ex- ~ceptional value. iY THE DAILY BRITISH WHI. ADDRESS HIWANS MEETING To Ask Support for Their Union--President Mills' Inaugural Address. | At Mondar's noon meeting of the {Kiwanis Club President "Billie" | Mills, with his officers grouped about | him, handled his first order of busi- | ness since his election to the chair. He gave a brief but inspiring and interesting {naugural address in which he outlined the principles and alms of Kiwanis and described the possibilities for good werk... For the year 1924 the president asked the same support from the | Amembers which had been accorded preceding presidents. "Kiwanis," he said, "is a wonder- ful international organization. It is | nine years old on the twenty-first | day of January 'and in that nine years, since the first club in Detroit, has grown to 1,121 clubs all through Canada and fhe United States with over 84,000 members." He spoke of the good work done by the Kingston club in the past and mentioned it as the sponsor of the Belleville and Peterboro clubs, Ki- wanis wanted 'active members, not chalr-warmers. He would far rather see a man give one hour of his time | each week to Kiwanis work than five dollars at any time during the year. Kiwanis 1s not tied to any limited, narrow fields of endeavor. Its op- ; portunities are great and all-embrac- ing. A | Briefly the president sketched the | work before the committees for | 1924, but withheld the names of the chairmen. He suggested as good | work for one committee an enquiry | into, and effort toward, better play- ground accommodation in Kingston. His concluding remarks were to | promise the members that he would | see to it that all meétings started | sharp on time and were finished as | nearly as possible 'within an hour, except in the case of special banquets or formal functions, | i "Wewsboys on Hand. At t request of the president Kiwanian (Dr. L. J.) Austin intro- duced a deputation from the King- ston's Newsboys' "Association, con- sisting of "Benny" Renaud, the pre- sident, and Earl Waterman, the sec- retary. The two manly little fel- lows occupied seats between the pre- sident and vice-president and were the guests of the club for the day. President "Benny" Renaud told of the organization of which he is the head and asked the attention of the members to .Secretary Waterman's remarks. The other little chap, the secretary, was mounted on a chair and pr ded to outline his ideas. The Newsboys' Association is for the purpose of promoting co-operation between the boys and courtesy to pa- trons. The membership is not what it should be and the Kiwanians are petitioned te help out in a drive for members.' Chief of Police Robinson, the honorary president of the asso- ciation, has helped the boys to or- ganisze. The address was given in a straightforward and manly fashion and won the approval of the Kiwan- fans as well as thelr laughter at some of the naive statements. Kiwanian Frank -Hoag gave some information about a club he had visited in Montreal and Kiwanian Brace Hopking asked for the sup- port of the club Tuberculosis Association. He named several speakers of international re- nown who will be here to address meetings under K.T.A, auspices and asked for a general attendance o Kiwanis at these meetings, 4 Kiwanian "Ernie" Smithieg led i songs which were particularly good, and Kiwanian Broom presided at the plano. The attendance was good and the first meeting under the new executive a very bright and suecess- ful event. . Truth and politeness are seldom for the Kingston Old South, a land he knows well and | AN AWFUL ATTACK! OF PIMPLES ALL OVER HIS FACE Pimples breaking out on the face | and other parts of the body is a' sure sign that the blood is not in! proper shape. | While the skin is the object of the | {"attack the real seat of the diseass is | in the blood on account of the entire | circulation being poisoned. Burdock Blood Bitters quickly and | effectually banishes pimples and all | other skin diseases as it goes right to | the root of the trouble by cleansing | and enriching the blood. | Mr. Conrad Anderson, Keifield, Sask., writes:--f'A year ago 1 had! an awful attack' of pimples. They | broke out all over my face and 1] could not get rid of them in any way. | One day a friend told me about your | Burdock Blood Bitters and let meé | have a bottle he had to spare, After! using it. I noticed a change, so I| bought three more 'bottles, and now | I don't know there is such a thing as'| pimples." ' { B.B.B. is manufactured only by | The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, | nt. } | A WOREL PEE | SHOWING AT THE GRANT D. W. Griffith's "White Rose" Is a Masterpiece of the Screen. One of the finest pictures ever seen in Kingston opened at the Grand Qpera House yesterday when "The White Rose" was shown for the first time. For six months D. Ww, Griffith, | master motion picture producer, shut his eyes to the world at large, | at least to problemg of ths World in | general, and reconstructed in his! own mind scenes in the Old Squth | as they were before progress stick | that region with its sweep. | He was making a new production, | "The White Rose," and while the | story is a modern one, it has refiec- | tions of an age gone by and glories | of a time that will pever return. Al- | though the story of "The White Rose" will appear 8 an up-to-date subject, its fundamentals hark back to age-old theories and prejudices. In order to place the proper frame 'about this moving canvas, Mr. Gfif- fith sought a locale where change has been less notable than elsewhere in our land. He has gone far into the old Bayou Teche country of western Louisiana and placed his leading actors against a background adequately representative of a social order that has held uninterrupted sway for two centuries, The tale of a wronged girl; the scorn heaped upon her and the strug- gle she has in "beating back' is not new. It practically dates back to Mother Eve and the earliest woman- hood. The world hasn't changed much in many things; they still put sick 'men in prisons and defiled in- nocence, yet undefiled, is made t football of false pride and standard. We like to ape our forbears: we seem bent, and it must be the childish- ness in us, to do as those before us did. Mr. Griffith has been most happy when at work upon a big theme but placed in provincial setting, Witness, | his "Way Down East" when he told | an old, old story amid the bigotry] of New England and matched his human shadings with the shifts of Nature. He has now turned to the | has heard from childhood as his peo- ple trace back for centuries in that region. » "The White Rose" is pussibly one of the most forceful and beautiful things Mr. Griffith has attempted in his long and noteworthy career. He surely knows the land which he plc- tures and he is familiar with its traditions and shortcomings. To make this story doubly: effec- tive he has chosen a cast of excep- tionally brilliant players. Among those who are seen .in leading roles are Mae Marsh, Carol Demp- ster, Ivor Novello, Neil Hamilton, ut Men's Hockeys, Skates attached free of charge. Now For a Never in a lifetime did we ever show such wonderful val-- ues in Skating or Hockey Boots. a We sell the best $3.50 Hockey Boots for Boys and Ladies. Black Grain Leather trimmed with Tan Strappings. 50 to $6.50. v ABERNETHY'S SHOE STORE 'A rover -- me fm. STOMACH MISERY,~ GAS, INDIGESTION "Pape's Diapepsin" Corrects Sour, Upset Stomachs at Once "Pape's Diapepsin' is the quick- est, surest relief for indigestion, gases, flatulence, heartburn, sour- ness, fermentation or stomach dis- tress caused by acidity. A few tab- lets g.ve almost immediate stomach relief. Correct your stomach and di- gestion now for a few cents. Drug- gists sell millions of packages. { 2 A AA ttt tra iin Charles: Emmett Mack, Lucille La Verne, Porter Strong and others. He gathered his supernumeraries in the sections wherein he worked--Louisi- ana, Georgia, Mississippi, Alabama and Southern Florida. "The White Rose" will be pre- sented at the Grand again tonight and tomorrow afternoon and night. It is a picture no person should miss. GANANOQUE. Jan. 15.--The 1924 council was sworn in yesterday at 11 a.m., as follows: Mayor, W. J. Wilson; Councillors, Karr, Hudson, Seal, Pullaw, Knight and Sinclair, Rev. D. Mick, pastor of Grace Methodist church, led in prayer. Mayor Wilson] who enters into his sixth term as mayor and who first entered the council in 1902, has been a member during that entire period, with the exception of the last couple of years, when he sought ne munigl- pal honors: In his inaugural 'ad- dress, Mayor Wilson referred to the splendid financial position of Gan noque, advocated the continuance of road asphalt oiling," suggested im- provements to the athletic field in rear of the park, and the advisabil- ity of purchasing the electric light plant. The contract for street light- ing expires this year. He expressed the wish also that the long delayed improvements to the public schools would be. carried out this year, and commended highly the work of the Horticultural Society, The merchants were also urged to co-operate with councils interested in a ferry at the foot of Howe Island, and im- provements to road from Gananoque north to a point east of Seeley's Bay. The many natural advantages of Gananoque and attractions for sum- mer tourists were specially referred to, Mayor Wilson claiming a splen- did future for Gananoque as & tour- ists' paradise. Every inducement to new industries was ddvoeated, and the best possible consideration asked for present manufacturers, many of whom have been established in the town over half a century. ' Co-op- eration with the Board of Educa- tion and water commissioners was also urged. He also noted with pleasuré the large increase in pat- ronage of the public library and re- ferred to the- excellent Pooks avail- able. Reference was made also to the Methodist Conference which will be held in Gananoque in June mext, and of Gananoque's fine geographi- cal position for conventions, espe cially now with such excellent hotel accommodation to offer. The Old Home Week committee, of which the mayor ig chairman, was given spe- cial mention as one of the big events of the year. ,The fiayor appealed to the council for co-operation and hop- ed they would all work togethef in the town's best interests. The committee to strike the standing committee for the year was then named and certain by-laws pas- sed. The first regular meeting of 'the council will be held tonight. Following are the several committee named for the year: : Finance: Sealy, Sinclair-and Karr; roads and bridges, Hudson, Séal, Pullaw and Karr; police: -Pullaw, Karr, Hudson; Property, Karr, Knight, Sinclair; Market and Poor Relief, Seal, Sinclair, Hudson; court of revision, Sincllar, Knight, Hud- son, Seal and Pullaw. A The water commissioners. for 1924 held thelr inaugural fog at 10 a.m. yesterday, The fol- surer; C. C. Skinner, A. Lott and 'Mayor Wilson. a George Scott, R. Allan, -_ OUR MOTTO: QUALITY AND SERVICE sold, REID'S The. entire happiness of your home is in your hands, The selecting of furniture, like selection of friends, has much to do with the happiness of home life, and just as you look for character and reputation in choosing your friends, so should you' look for same qualities in choosing Fur- niture." Come in and let us help you with valuable suggestions. y life-time furniture--let us show you dif- ference between being (served and being Every day is bargain day - at the home of good values. Let us: show you James Reid been in use for over 30 years to re- lieve babies and children of Consti- pation, Flatulency, Wind Colic and Diarrhoea; allgying Feverishness arising therefrom, and, by regulating the Stomach and Bowels, aids the as- similation of Food; giving natural "CHILDREN CRY FOR "CASTORIA" A Harmless Substitute for. Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups -- No Narcotics! " Mother! Fletcher's Castoria has sleep without opiates, bears signature of The genuine quartette, C. Sine, and Mayor Wil- som-were in Mallorytown last night for the annual MRthodist tea meet- ing. Miss Annie Kelly is visiting friends in Oshawa and Toronto, Misses Maynie Bremnan, Rebecca Calow, Margaret Brennan and Fred Mooney were among those who mo- stored to Kingston last evening for the play in St. Joseph's hall undef the auspices of the Hotel Dieu hos- pital, Mr. and Mrs. Sanford Delaney and children motored to Brockville on Sunday last. Mrs. 8. C. Taylor is entertaining at a large bridge today. W. T. Sampson was the guest of R. 8. McLaughlin, Oshawa, over the week-end. The young people of St. Andrew's church held a sleigh drive last evening, after which they were given coffee and hot dogs in the lecture room. The following kindly looked after this important part of the pro- gramme--Mrs. George Gilbert, Mrs. W. Hawke, Mrs, James Bell and Mrs, 8. A. McKenzie, The death occurred Sunday of Mrs. Margaret Carey at the home of John W. Spence, Sand Hill. Carey was the mother of John Carey and Mrs. John W. Spence, and had been a resident of this section far many years, being held in Very high . esteem. The funeral will take place from the residence of J. W. Spence, Sand Hill, today to Gananoque ¢e- metery vault, Revs. Mr. Lancaster of.Sand Hill, and C.-E. Kidd, of St. Andrew's church, Gananoque, will officiate, ------------------ It is with words as with sunbeams. --the more they are condensed the more they burn. A verse may find him who a sere weather 0 itches, bcomies source ¢ skin cles, healthy arms hands, a herbal Zam~Buk. is # i i i it j f SH 1% » bel i | i ah | = rR mn TT . Nd NTT July drosing wintry brings a host of skin troubles. Cold-sores, Mrs, "1 y

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy