Daily British Whig (1850), 11 Feb 1924, p. 5

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THE DAILY BRITI > SH WHIG A Bullder from Childhood to Old Age -- DELCO- LIGHT The complete Electric Light and Power plant for every country home. W.C. CANNON 164 Barrie Street. heme 1158J. em eal Estate General Insurance Reliable English, Canadian and American companies represented. For Several Years If you have suffered from consti- pation for years, tried all kinds of iremedies "without getting relief, 1t yon have been subject to ail the miseries associated with constipation, | Wouldn't you consider it a blessing to be able to keep the bowels regular and in a good healthy condition and | Prevent disease getting a foothold on your system? Milburn's Laxa-Liver Pills are in- this purpose; their Worst cases dicated just for regular use relieving the of constipation. Mr. M. Hedican, Sudbury, Ont., writes: --*"I have been troubled with constipation for several years. " [ began to use Milburn's Laxa-Liver Pills and find them to be the best remedy I have ever used for regulat- lng the bowels and liver. I always keep them now and recommend them Guarantee Bonds. Victory Bonds bought and sold. R. H. Waddell Phones $.0-506. 58 Broek St. . THOMAS COPLEY Carpenter. works, laid. od ~~ PIANO TUNING Plano Tuning, Repairing and Player Plano Adjusting, Norman H. Butcher, 27 Pine Street. PHONE 1384. DENTAL SURGEON Corner of Johnson and Wellington. Streets. : Telephone 863, For Moving of FREIGRT, FURNITURE, FLANOS, CARTAGE and § BEVERY DESCRIPTION Kingston T Co. Faone 317. Evenings 2331, 163 WELLINGTON STREET SAFES, Dental Surgeon Phone 987 us for all kinds of Carpentry thmates given on new floors Have your hardwood floors cleun- With our mew floor cleaning ma. DR. A. W.WINNETT TORAGE Op highly." Milburn's Laxs-Liver Pills are 25c. a vial at all dealers, or mailed direct on rece.pt of price by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Torento, Ont, ONERNAENANRAANEN Choice Western Meats GROCERIES AND FRESH { VEGETABLES, Best service. J. T. EVES 171 RAGLAN ROAD Phone 2380. HENmRNME Ree Ree tetera DR. J. C. W. BROOM L.D.S., D.D.S, Wellington and Brock Streets, Eatrance: 160 Welllagton St. Evenings by appointment, PHONE 679, WATTS People's klorist 177 Wellington Street. Fresh Flowers and" Plants daily. Funeral designs, and wedding bouquets to order. Phone 1768. Residence 1187. W.R. McRae & Co, Golden Lion Block For a bad fire, call the Fire Department. For a good, clean, call for BOOTH & C05 . COAL 'Phone 188 Grove Ina Yards hot fire, 15c. 1b., 2 Ibs. tor 25c., 9 Ibs. for $1.00, Prompt delivery. Phone 645. KINGSTON'S AllWool Blankets Price $1.50 L Cohen & Co. 207-275 ONTARIO STREET PHONES 836 and 837, WV Ermine £/ Ww", x aN ie JAI = } : ' Two Sir Positives san seagee moot without a skirmish. An obstiaate heart KINGSTON anp VICINITY v To Speak in Peterboro. Principal R, Bruce Taylor will speak before the Peterboro Canadian, Club at an early date, ------ Conscience Money. The customs department, through the Prescott Journal, acknowledge $15 conscience money, rece! ved from a point in New York state. - -- On Légisiature Committees. Hon. W. F. Nickle is chairman of the legislative library committee and W. D. Black, Addjngton, is a member of the striking committee of the leg- islature, . a -- Back From a Trip. Mrs. A. P. Young, Bath, has re- turned home from a pleasant visit with her son, Dr, C. R. Young, Bing- hamton, N.Y.; also with friends at Toronto, Hamilton and Buffalo, Been Sorely Bereaved. Mrs. William Abel, Carthage, N.Y, has been sorely bereaved during the past four months by the death of her mother and father; Mr. and Mrs. Ste- phen Hickey, in Kingston, and a bro- ther in Carthage, N.Y, ' ---- To Wipe Out M. The Gananoque Veterans Club has already paid $2,000 on its club quar- ters. There still remains a mortgage for $2,000. | To wipe out the indeht- edness the boys are making a can- vass of the town for membership, S-- a ergy Could See Europe in the West. Dr. J. W. Bdwards speaking on immigration at London, Ont. de- clared that he would protect the British future of Canada by discour- aging immigration from any part of continental Europe with the excep- tion of Scandinavia. The people of that part, he said, have indicated a capacity for' acquiring Canadian citizenship with little difficulty, It Wells Fisher; secretary-treasurer, A. C. Casselman. ---- The Generator Restored. The street railway ig once more | fixed up and on Saturday all the cars | were [n service, the first time in| about six weeks. One of the genera- tors furnishing power to the street rallway broke down and had to be sent to Toronto for repairs. = The machine was only returned here the latter Part of last week. -- Honors Henry Coolican. The Renfrew Board of Education at its last meeting paid signal honor to Henry Coolican, one of its mem- bers. A resolution of thanks for his work as chairman of the property committee during the building of a new gollegiate institute was passed, and it was resolved that a portrait of himself be hung in the auditorium of the new school. In the election by ballot of a chairman of the Board of Education for 1924 Mr. Coolican was the choice. He has been for sev- eral years a member of the board. -- County Orange Lodge, The annual meeting of the South Leeds County Lodge of the Orange Order was held at New Dublin, the following officers being elected and instajJled under the direction of the | retiring county master, J. W. Mec- Ewen; C.M., J. B. Seal, Gananoque; | D.C.M., R. M. Wallace, Bellamy: | chaplain, H. B. Sanford, Brockville; | RS. G. N. Gardner, Gananoque; Was no longer necessary to cross the Atlantic to see Europe, it could be seen by taking a trip to the Canadian west. -------------- Prescott Eiects Officers. At the inaugural meeting of the Prescott board of education A. C. Casselman was appointed secretary Pro tem. Plans were drafted for the year's work and the committees ap- pointed. The chairman is Rev, G, | WHY THE WEATHER? | Secretary. American Meteorological Hoctety, Tells How. Seo Jumpy Winter Weather. The winter of 1928-1924 in 1 Purvis North America has been character- ized by highly vartable conditions, While throughout the eastern halt of the continent, the first part of the winter was extraordinarily mild and marked by inconsequential cold spells, there descended on the west- ern plateau and mountain regions of the United States and northern Mexico, a number of extremely cold waves. Not unatil the end of De- cember did truly winter conditions become established in the Middle West and in the Bast. At that time the first of a series of extreme cold Waves roared southward and south- eastward from the northern interior, The firet few of these went through the Middle West so fast that they falled to spread into the middle At- lantic and mortheastern states with more than a moderate degree of cold. Late in January, however, the general persistence of celd weather in the Middle West, favored by an Sccumulgted snow cover, main such a widespread mass of cold air that cold waves began to make them- selves felt very decidedly east of the Great swept northward from the Gulf re- gion in response to rapidly passing low pressure areas through Canada. With a cold wave' the temperature would fall 30 or 40 degrees almost over night, stay low for a day or two, then rise as suddenly to the pre- vious moderate temperatures, Tomorrow: The Blizzard, ------ Yonge Mills Notes. Feb. 8.--The friends of Mrs. V, R. Purvis will be pleased to hear that she is making favorable im- provement since her operation, on Tuesday, for appendfcitis. Misses a Wilson, Brockville, and Jean Urqubart, Albany, N.Y. here last week. If your ®ool- lens are safe in pure water, hey Care safe Sold only in sealed packets * ~dustproof! them with powder. Lux won't Soft. 1infly blankets Woollens must be washed very carefully, A strong soap shrinks and coarsens wool Just as it chafes and .eddens a delicate The original soft fluffiness of your best blankets can be entirely lost by washing Keep them soft and downy It keeps them soft and fluffy. With the pure Lux sdds you don't have to rub the delicate wool rich lather through and through them, and the dirt floats off, LEVER BROTHERS LIMITED FS. 8. C. E. Dixon, Lansdowne; treasurer,. Fred Johnson, Lans- downe; first lecturer, F. J. Gibson, | Brockville; first deputy lecturer, | Joseph Fox, Brockville; second de- | puty lecturer, H. M. Maud Bellamy. | ---------- -- A Trip to Europe. A comprehensive travel pro- gramme has beem arranged for the Overseas Education League tour for teachers this summer. The teachers will sail from Montreal on July 4th, the three upper decks of 'the Cana- dian Pacific steamship Marlocl hav- ing been reserved for the party. A number of Kingston teachers have arranged to take the trip, -- Offers Log House, C. W. Cole, Cape Vincent, N.Y. writes to A. F. Welbanks, Picton, as follows: "I see in 'the Picton Times the Fair Association wants a log house, I have a very old one on the Ducks. If it would be suitable for them I would be glad to donate it providing they would send a man to take it down and place it on the dock. I would land it at Point Tra- verse dock for them. The house in question is over a hundred years old, the lower logs are beginning to get quite dozy. If they decide to take it," the man in charge could cut some 10gs to replace those not fit to put in | again, also free of\charge. I have! been told my great, great grand-| father was a U.E.L. I have lived in | United States eighteen years and 1 am still a Canadian." IA a Com cei aa int the wrong soap or washing shrink or mat your blankets, bres. Just squeeze the TORONTO FOR SALE brick, stone foundation, 8 rooms, bath, furnace, good cellar, HOUSE--Solid electric lights, gus, ~--$5,500 BRICK--2 Story and attic. Electric lights, gas, 8 piecg bath, bedrooms, hot water beating, 11 rooms, 6 University. Price $6,500, M. B. 'Phone 704 or 15421, . . visited. C 5 bedrooms, verandah, garage. sy 800d cellar, near Queen's TRUMPOUR i" A Bright Red Glow and a warm Fire in your Hearth, during these cold, winter nights, Just 'phone one five seven one for some Hard Coal Briquettes. Telephone: Private Braach Exchange, No. 1871. » That Word "SERVICE" has been abused many, many times, But when we say we sive it, wo mean #t «eo ask any of our customers. Handling only the best in Radio; mowing the Radio business as only an exclusive redio firm cam, and beating ou t-of-town prices maked Us your wise ¢holce for anything vadto. No false promises and a money-back gears Antes every tdme--that's us. ton--prepaid to your door WTAE, DA RADIO STOR a -- SCOTCH SHORTBREAD Have something good. Order our Scotch Shortbread made with Eastern Dairy | - School Butter, F. C. HAMBROOK CATERING IN ALL ITs BRANCHES 115 BROCK STREET . . Phone sige. Sale of Boys' Overcoats ¥7.50 Regular value $10.00 to $13.50. -- PREVOST'S Phone 508] OLOTHING STORE 55 Brook St. A fine collection of skins of all kinds, small Furs and Fur Coats, 78 BROCK STREET, _ Phone 700 SUIT SALE OVERCOAT soLE

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