Daily British Whig (1850), 17 Jun 1924, p. 3

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

$ TUESDAY, A---- JUNE 17, BEST'S Film Finishing Department is work- ing overtime to keep --pace withthe -extra- demand. ' New customers are being added every day. Prompt, care fal service, coupled with the fact that all work is done by an expert staff, has caused such an increase that it has been found necessary to enlarge the equipment. Leave your next roll 1 ith L. T. Best Druggist Open Sundays EEE FOR SALE 4 BRICK VENEER HOUSES -- @/ rooms each, 8 piece bath, electri- city and gas, good yards, central lo- cation. Will yield over 10% as investment. $4,600--Brick, 8 rooms, 2 piece bath, hot air, electric light aad gas, right of way. Central. $7000-- Brick, 9 rooms, all modern, h.w. floors. $5,000--Brick, 6 rooms, modern im- provements, garage, $8,000-- Brick, 9 rooms; all im- provements, garage, large gar- den, fruit and towers, good location. $8,500--Brick, 9 rooms; all modern; central. == Frame, 6 rooms, Semi- Bungalow; improvements. FURNISHED HOUSES TO RENT. Bateman's Real Estate 1113§ BROCK ST., KINGSTON Telephone 19258, THE MANY SPORTS OF SUMMER NEED THEIR VARIOUS | TYPES OF PRIZE TROPHIES | We have many | Cups, Medals, | Shields, etc. ititsuesse urate in stock, at all » prices. Others of chosen or spe- 4 cial design can be had at | a very few days' notice. b a work of all sinds undertaxen. Screen Doors Screen Windows Lawn Mowers Garden Hose Refrigerators Gas Ranges Perfection Oil Stoves Make your selection now McKelvey & Birch, Limited General Contractors, Heating Specialists, Stem Jobbers of Plumbers' and Gas-Fitters' Supplies, Stoves, and House Furnishing Hardware, Tools, Ofis, Be: and Tin Work; Electric work, Painting and Paper Hanging. fpecial Fitters and Plumbers, Shelf, Heavy Supplies, Sheet Metal AAR NAPANEE PERSONALS. Rebekahs Came to Kingston For De- gree Work Here. Napanee, June 17.--Hamil Beauci who has been in the Cobourg hospi- tal for, the past six weeks, was re- moved on Sunday to the Toronto General Hospital where he will have his leg reset and other injuries at- tended to, which he rcceived in a motor accident. Many Napanee people motored to Belleville for the United Empire ------ Loyalist celebration. About fifty Rebekahs motored to Kingston on Monday evéning to take part in the degree work with the Kingston Lodge. Mrs. F. S. Boyes gave a handker- chief shower and Mrs. W. H! Steacy, a bath room and bedroom shower and Miss Alice Preston a tea last week in honor of the coming bride, Miss Dorothy Smith. Wise men learn by other men's mistakes, fools by their own. - MRS. KNOX SUFFERED p+ $ » FOR OVER 8{. John Lady Was Nervous And Had Severe Indigestion . That Caused Intense Pain. "It has been nearly two years since I took Tanlac, but I am more grate- ful to the medicine than ever for 1 have felt just fine to this very day," recently declared Mrs. Lena Knox, 51 + Hilliard Street, St. John, N. B. "For three years, indigestion and nervousness caused me such agony it beggars description. I was act- ually afraid to eat; at night I would lie awake nervous and sleepless for hours, and finally became so weak and thin I was almost a shadow. "But Tanlac gave me a splendid appetite, calm nerves and a diges- tion that is simply perfect. I sleep the whole night through and have gained such weight, strength and energy that I always feel at my Tanlac is for sale by all good uggists, Accept no substitute. 40 lion bottles sold. . THREE YEARS « Tanlac Vegetable Pills For Constipation, Made and Recommended by the Manufacturers of Tanlac. THE DAILY BRITISH W ALUMINUM + FIG. 1 An Electrolytic Charger for Your "AM Battery. Although the advent of the dry- cell tube abolished to a considerabla {extent the use of storage '"A' bat- | teries in receiving circuits, there are {many listeners who maintain age cells as a source of filament cur- rent supply. With the larger tubes, {such as the UV-200 and UV-201-A, {a storage battery is r ically | necessary, and even the {smaller tubes, storage cells are a | worthwhile investment. | Many people who own storage | batteries, however, are not able to {afford a charger, and find it neces- |sary to carry their batteries back and forth between their homes and {the service stations where the cells can be charged. This is not only inconvenient, but is quite expensive in the long run. For the benefit of those of our readers who have no [chargers, we present the following {description of a method of charging | storage cells. The diagram illustrates she es- {sential part of the rectifier, for Irectifying the alternating house {current, and also a hook-up of the |apparatus. Remember that this |circuit is for use only on alternat- {ing current--it is not for use on di- | rect current. The rectifier, which is "R" in | Fig. 2, is made up of an aluminum {plate and a lead plate immersed in a solution of borax. The details of the platés are given in Fig. 1. The plates, as shown, are approximately {ten inches square. but the exact size is not important, and a variation of several inches in either direction 1s permissible. The plates are approxi- stor- AE m 0 v + of | BATTERY # pr--G Fig 2 An Electrolytic Charger for Your "A" Battery | mately one-sixteenth of an inch | { thick, but this thickness is also un- |important, and you can use any- [thing of about that thickness. The plates are fastened with} screws to a piece of wood about {half an inch thick, two inches | wide, and long eaough to extend beyond the plates sufficently 'to support the plates in the jar. It the plates are attached so that {they extend about an inch above {the wood, binding posts for connec- | tions may be put in each one as in-| | dicated. | The jar to hold the solution may [be porcelain, earthenware or glass, {but should not be metal. It Should {be large enough so that the ends of {the wood separator can rest on the! edge and suspend the plates in the! | solution, The solution is simply wa:- ler in which is mixed as much *"20-| | Mule Team" borax as will dissolve in| the amount needed to fill the con-| tainer to within an inch of the top. After the jar is filled, it | would be a good idea to pour some | paraffin oil on top to prevent | | exaporation. ! | The finished electrolytic rectifier {is connected as shown in Fig. 2. {The aluminum plate is run to the! | "positive" connection of the "AM | battery, while the lead plate is run | {to a lamp bank. The purpose of this {lamp bank is to determine the charg- | {ing rate. We have shown five 100-| joan lamps in parallel, which will give a fairly good charging rate, but | if desired only two or three lamps | need be used, which will give a slow- er charging rate. Copyright, 1924, by The {can Radio Relay League, Inc. Ameri- fi RADIO BROADCASTING i | er re tt fe ett | The following is a list of radio | Stations and their broadcasting pro- | grammes, which may be heard lo- | cally on Wednesday: ! rr WBZ (827) Springfield, Mass, i .5 p.m.--Dinner concert by the | WBZ trio; Springfield studio. | 6 p.m.--Results of games played | by the Eastern, American and Na- | tional leagues, Market reports as furnished by the United States De- partment of Agriculture at Boston. 6.30 p.m.--Bedtime story for the kiddies; Springfield studio. 6.40 p.m.--Concert by the WBZ | trio, and Charles H. Young, tenor; | Mrs. Miriam M. Thomson, accom- panist, Springfield studio. 7.30 p.m.--Concert arranged by John Sinclair of Clan MacGregor of Quincy, featuring Clan MacGregor 1 pipe band, Clan MacGregor male quartette. 10.30 p.m.--Weekly midnight dance concert by Leo Reisman and his orchestra. 11 p.m.--Songs by Bill Coty and Jack Armstrong. WLW (309) Cincinnati, O. 4 p.m.--Concert for the "Shut Ins" by Wurlitzer Concert Company, under the direction of Mr. and Mrs. William Dunning. 5.15 p.m.--Baseball results. 8 p.m.--Special programme by instrumental trio from Richmond, Ind. \ WGY (380) Schenectady, N.Y. 5 p.m.--Produce and stock mar- ket quotations; news bulletins; base- ball results. 5.30 p.m.--*"Adventure Story." KDKA (326) Pittsburg, Pa. 2.15 p.m.----Baseball scores inning by inning of the games being played today. 5 p.m.--Baseball scores. 5.30 p.m.--Dinner concert by the Pittsburg Athletic Association or- chestra, Gregorio Scalzo, director. 6 p.m.--Baseball scores; dinner | concert continued. 6.30 p.m.--The children's period | --Mrs. Jack Sprat will drop in at the | radio studio and have some fun with | the children. 6.45 p.m.--News bulletin, 7 p.m.--Baseball scores, 7.40 p.m.--National Stockman and Farmer market reports. i 8 p.m.--Sacred concert by the Westinghouse band. T. J. Vastine, | conductor, | ---- i Complete radio programmes s>id| at Canada Radio Stores. | | GLAD OF CHURCH UNION. | -- | Free Churches of Scotland Send Message. { Toronto, June 17.--The General | Assembly of the United Free] Churches of Scotland has sent its! congratulations to the Presbyterian Church in Canada upon the prospec- | tive consummation of the union with | the Methodist and Congregational | churches. The following resolution | has just been received by Rev. R. B. | Cochrane, clerk of the Presbyterian | General Assembly: "The Assembly | of the United Free Church of Scot- | land at present convened learn with | the prefoundest interest and satis- | faction of the union now happily af-| fected between the Presbyterian; the | Congregational and the Methodist | churches of Canada. They congratu- | late the United Church upon the | consummation of their cherished | dream and purpose towards union, | and they trust that such difficulties as remain may speedily be removed. They pray that by means of this union the religious interests of Can- | ada will be greatly furthered, and | that the blessing of God may rest! richly upon the life and activity of the United Church in the endeavor to build the Kingdom of Our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ in that great and growing community." United Labor has a bitter root but a Sweet taste. | Jo SONG FROM "VALENTINIAN" Sleep, thou easer of all woes, On this afflicted prince: fall like a cloud In gentle showers; give nothing that is loud Or painful to his shumbers; easy, sweet, And as a purling stream, thou son of Night, Pass by his troubled senses; sing his pain, TA Into this prince h ~--Beaumont and Fletcher. = = HIG PROBS: --Wednesday, fair, moderate winds, showery. . Summertime Frocks Er -- Dainty, charming and exquisite- ly youthful are these Summer Frocks. Everyone in the group is ac- claimed as authoriative. : Radiant in color and texture, they present a picture of beauty only a poet can aptly describe. So we prefer rather not to attempt description, but instead ask your inspection of them -- for every .Dress and Sport occasion. ' Priced from-- That Summer is in full bloom in our Millinery Depart- ment is evinced by our elaborate displays. The showing' runs the entire gamut of correctness in shape, color and trim, with jaunty, little Tailored Hats for Sports wear. We invite your inspection of this wondrous summer show- ing, which includes many late adaptions from New York in White and colors. Priced from-- *4.98 up to $22.50 New Jaeger Wear-Just Arrived FOR MEN, WOMEN AND CHILDREN Our showing is complete in detail and affords a broad choice in Sweaters, Coats, Hosiery, Scarfs, Gloves, Men's Golf Hose, Underwear and Rugs. . We take this opportunity of inviting your inspection ~ while stocks are intact. 7 ia RR willie Ba nda bso ©

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy