Daily British Whig (1850), 20 Jun 1924, p. 2

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Scart This smart and serviceable style is the season's latest vogue in Neckpieces, de- signed in Beaver, Hudson Seal, Ermine, etc. Your inspection invited. JOHN McKAY Limited Beaven 1IAN ASSISTANT NURSE IN THE PUBLIC SCHOOLS ¢ Miss Bessie Wilson, Kingston, Has Been Appointed to The Position. | Miss Bessie Wilson, 73 Lower Al- fred street, has been appointed assis- tant nurse in the public schools, her duties to commence at the fall term | Her appointment was made at | meeting of the management cOm- mittee of the Board of Education | held on Thursday afternoon. It will be recalled that the ques- | discussed at the last meeting of the { the appointment. The appointment of Miss Wilson | | is regarded as a most favorable one, as she is well qualified in every way to take over the duties. Miss Wil- SPECIAL SALE OF MEN'S SUITS ALL THIS WEEK AT $16.45, $24.95, $29.95 It will pay you to see these extra special bargains. Louis Abramson's 336 Princess Street Phone 1098. | | son is a graduate of the Kingst on | | General hospital and also passed her examinations for school nursing, having taken a course during the | | summer months of 1923. She | took a course in V.ctorian Order nursing and served in that work for} two years in Kingston, and has had considerable with children of school age. During | her training with the Victorian Or- | der, Miss Wilson was required to spend several weeks with the school nurse of Ottawa, in close observatiea work. In connection witth this course she also had the opportunity the best schools in Toronto. UNIQUE EVENT STAGED 3 | Block Dancing Was Enjoyed {| By the Community on Thursday Night. A rather unique and delightful affair was staged on Thursday eve- | ning by the residents of | street, living between Brock and Mack street. The pavement having been hosed and swept, and sprink- |led with corn meal, dancing was made enjoyable. | the community provided the music from the verandahs of S. A. Trus-| | cott, and W. H. Dalby. A space | nearly half of the block was roped off and fully one hundred couples. | both dld and young, enjoyed them- i selves for two hours. No doubt this enterprising section |of the city has started something | which will be followed by other sec- | tions during the summer months. | A very large crowd enjoyed them- selves watching the dancers. READ THE ADVERTISEMENTS Know What Is Best | Rockwood Nurse Graduates. | A class 'of nine nurses will grad- {uate from Rockwood Hospital at | closing exercises to be held next | Friday afternoon. at three o'clock. The pro me for the occasion and the prize-winners are not yet ready All Qutdoors Invites Your KODAK This Drug Store recognized The Kodak with a complete stock of Ko- daks, Brownies and every kind of Kodak need and where your Films are made into PER- FECT PICTURES. MAHOOD Drug Co. Ltd. Corner Princess and Bagot Sts. Telephone 519. GROCERIES FRIDAY and SATURDAY Granulated Sugar 10 lbs. S4c. Belleville Creamery, 1b. p Rolls and Prints, 1b. ..... 29c¢. Shredded Wheat . 2 Eddy's Matches 3 pkgs. . .25ec. Prunes, extra choice, 2 lbs, 25c¢. Cottage Roll Bacon (piece) 17¢ 7 1b. bag Pastry Flour ..20c. White Mealy Potatoes, pk. 85c. Fancy Glass Cups Mustard 9c. Excellent Black Tea, 1b. . .58c¢. Pure Clover Honey, 5 lbs. 78c. Surprise, Comfort and P. & G., 3 'bars for 33c. OUTSIDE.MARKET Cullen's CASH AND CARRY An endless variety of STRAW HATS All 2 sappy fies From the largest selection in town. Newest braids, newest blocks--the fin- est values your money can buy, at $1.50--$2.00--$2. 50--$3.00 . Everything for Summer comfort in Headwear and Men's Furnishings. CAMPBELL BROS. for announcement. The successful | graduates, in order of merit, | given below: | Miss Anna M. {ville, Miss Cecilia Doughtery, Brock- {ville; Miss Grace Alton, Perth Road; Miss Frances Burkett, Ren- Itrew; Miss Ella Natin, Deseronto; Miss Carrie Edmunds, Renfrew; | Miss Margaret Hunt, Erinsville, | Miss Dora Gray, Sharp's Corners; Miss Eva Mundell, Washburn. To Alexandria Bay. | Through the heart of the Thous- {and Islands, down the Canadian Channel, through the Admiralty Group, and Fiddlers Elbow. One hour at Alexandria Bay, returning by the American channel past the show places on the U. 8. side, Thousand Island Park and Clayton. Steamer Brockville. Every Saturday and Sunday at 2 p.m. (city time). The Islands are now at their best. See them all. Fare round trip, adults 75 cents, children 50 cents. Old Wolfe Islander Dead. Angus Grant, an old resident of ! Wolfe Island, passed away early Sat- urday morning, June 14th, at the residence of his nephew, Alexander Grant, after an {illness of _ seven weeks, aged eighty years, Service was conducted at the house by the Rev. Mr. Russell. The funeral was in charge of 8. 8' Corbett, and the remains were placed in the family plot, Wolfe Island. Deceased is sur- vived by nephews and nieces. Won A Scholarship. Arthur Smith, son of Canon T. Austin Smith, Cataraqui, 1s visiting at his home, after attending Trinity College, where he was awarded a jubilee scholarship in divinity. He has been appointed by the bishop ot Ontario to the charge at Harlowe, in North Addington, for the summer months. » Crop Conditions. Rains have fallen throughout Canada with the exception of On- tario, and conditions generally are favorable. Seeaing has been prac- tically completed in all provinces. Germination is uniform and growth healthy in western provinces. The 's Passengers. The passengers of the S8. Meta- gama, which had a collision off New- foundland on Wednesday evening, will arrive at Quebec on Monday morning on the SS. Montreal, accord- ing to word received by the local office of the C.P.R. It is understood that thery were several passengers for Kingston on the Metagama, Tweddell's sale blue serge suits a resident of Belleville, for the past years, died on Wednesday after a long illness, aged sixty-nine years. 4 { tion of securing a second nurse w as | | board, when it was decided to make | also | experience in dealing | of seeing the equipment of some of | ON NELSON STREET | Nelson | are | Dougherty, Brock- | |2essseccscsserees | ON KINGSTON JOB FOR FIFTEEN 1: ifteen years ago Saturday | # Fire Chief James Armstrong { # took over his duties as head of % the Kingston fire department. The chief has been fighting fires for twenty-seven years. YEARS Ic sesbssrssene [eevessnnssseseee OILING THE HIGHWAY. | Toronto Company's Men Are Now At | | Westbrook. | The contract for oiling the provin- | cial highway in this vicinity has been awarded to the Dufferin Con- struction Company, of Toronto, who | | have already started operations. The contract includes the roads | from Napanee to Kingston, from | Kingston to Gananoque, Brockville, | Mallorytown and on to Perth, For| the past two days they have been | oiling from Odessa towards the city | { and are now at Westbrook. i The company has ene of the lat- | est equipment for this work, includ- | |ing 'a machine which spreads the | stone instead of having it done by | { hand. It has a camp situated at! | Collin"s Bay where it unloads the | oil. | The Dufferin Company is the firm | which made the big rock cut near | Eastview Camp a couple of years! ago. | | -- > i I IN MARINE CIROLES | & 3 The steamer Toronto passed down | this morning and will clear for Char- lotte on return this evening. The steamer City of Hamilton passed down to Montreal with pack- age freight. { The steamer Mapleton cleared for Port Colborne, The steamer Britannic was in from Montreal on the regular trip. The Brockville arrived from Pic- ten with freight. The steambarge Brantford clear- ed from Cawford's. 'The schooner Mary Daryeau clear- ed from Booth's Grove Inn yards. | An orchestra from | Offecs to Fill Strikers' Places Not Authorized The regent of the Municipal] Chapter of the I.0.D.E. of Kingston states that no official offer was made | of postal strikers. Any offers made the executive, the matter. rized by not considered mitted by its constitution to action in regard to strikes. Two Teachers Appointed To Public School Staff At a meeting of the management committee of the Board of Educa- tion, held on Thursday afternoon, Miss E. Lucia McTear, Frankford, and Miss Hazel McIntyre, Bath, were appointed to the public school teaching staff. Miss McTear has had four-and-a-half years' experience and Miss McIntyre seven years, and both teachers come to Kingston very highly recommended by the inspec- tors under whom they served. Here From California. Rev. Ernest Harlow, of California, is spending a few days in the city the guest of his brother, Milton | Harlow, the new Y. M. C. A. secre- tary. Rev. Mr. Harlow has been touring the Southern and New Sng- land states. He came here from Ot- tawa on Thursday and will go to London, to visit his mother betore returning home. Tweddell's sale blue serge :uits $28.50. After twenty-three years of ser- vice, 8. G. Stuart is retiring as lock- master on the Rideau Canal at Jones' by that organization to fill the places i to the postoffice authorities were of | an individual nature and not autho- | which had | The | L.O.D.E. as a body would not be per- | take | FRIDAY, JUNE 20, 1924. nana HERE IS A REAL TIRE The best value in this city or any city in Canada, with 24,000 mile guaranties for LQ 75 We have sold hundreds of these Tires. We have not one single dissatisfied customer. The best cheap Tire made and made by the largesttire manufacturer in Canada --Dominion Tire Company. BUY A PAIR TO-DAY ! Open Evenings. MOORE'S Open Evenings, 206-8 WELLINGTON STREET SATURDAY A Big Sale of Remnants EEE --VOILES. --CREPES. --RATINES. --PRINTS. --GALATEA. --SUITINGS. --SHIRTINGS. --COTTONS. +-NAINSOOK. --GINGHAMS. --SHEETINGS. --PILLOW COTTON. --DRESS GOODS. --CRETONNES. --CHINTZ. --CURTAIN MADRAS. --CURTAIN SCRIM. --BUNGALOW NETS. --SATEENS. --LINOLEUMS. --FLOOR OILCLOTHS. --STAIR --SILKS. --TABLE OILCLOTHS. --TOWELLINGS. --TABLE DAMASK. OILCLOTHS. quick sale. And many others all marked at special reductions for a Don't miss this op portunity. Newman & Shaw THE ALWAYS BUSY STORE " -- Tamworth Tidings. / Tamworth, June 19.--Miss Jo- scph Huffman is quite poorly. Her two sisters, Mrs. Smith, Utica, N.Y, and Miss Kellar, Watertown, N.Y, are in attendance. John Wagar, Oshawa, was in town visiting friends. Mr. Williams is the new man on the milk route for the Bowes Butter Co. The help in Gibbardi factory, Napanee, played ball with Tamworth on Wednesday at the" athletic grounds. Mr. Way and M. O'Brien and son, Tweed, were in town on Wednesday. The county road crusher is around town with a gang of men, repair- irg the roads. John McCormick has sold his farm to John Way; price, £3,000. Big social at Calvary to-night. Col, Frank C. Denison, U.S. con- sul at Prescott, will be placed on pension. He is seventy-four yedrs of age and has seen twenty-seven years' service with the U.S. consu- lar forces. Falls, on July 1st. a nt Mills' Straw Hats BEST UNDER THE SUN $1.50, $2, $2.50, $2.75, $3.00 Why swelter under the sun whem you could and should be wearing a light, cool, comfortable You will values in the city, variety. Straw or Panama. find us with the best styles and and by far the biggest "YOUR NEW HAT IS HERE Our Hats come mostly from the best English makers, light weight, easy fitting, and all the prices are moderate, $1.50 to $3.00 Ladies' Summer Hats Big Slaughter Sale Now On. $1.95, $2.95, $395, is | Ireland's Ancient Judiciary | Special Prices on Summer Millinery Parisian Shop 322 BROCK STREET Christians of the World To Meet in Stockholm . Stockholm, June 20.--The crown prince of Sweden has been named chairman of the Swedish committee which is preparing to entertain the delegates to the Universal Christian Conference on Life and Work to be | held in Stockholm in August, 1925, | The conference will be the guests of | the Swedish nation. The purpose of the gathering o declared to be an attempt to con- centrate thought on the mind of Christ as revealed in the Bible to- ward the great social, industrial and international questions prominent in post-war civilization. Dr. Arthur J. Brown of New York; the Archbishop of Canterbury; the Archbishop of Upsala and the Oecu- menical Patriarch of Constantinople are joint presidents of the interna- tional committee which is arranging for the conference, Gives Way to New System Dublin, June 20.--At the com- pletion of the Easter Law Sittings, the entire Irish judicial system, bas- éd on the model of the British which has prevailed in Ireland for many centuries, disappeared. There will be no more lord chan- cellors or lord chief justice, and the cept Monday, A Few More From Our Large List For Sale $2,600-- Up. Charles Street, de- tached frame, 7 rooms, electrie lights, B. and C.; hen house and garden. Deep lot. $3,000 0nn00n Street (cemtral) double frame with four rooms f each, electric light, deep lot. | Rents $330.00 per year, Easy | terms, $4.100-5are1e Street, detached |i frame, 10 rooms, hot water || heating, hardwood floors, = [ii bargain, | TORONTO STREET---New brick, rooms, electric light, and Ji a Jutiding lots at a reason able figure. Houses to rent. Hondg bought and sold. Fire Insuran MULLIN Cor. Division and Johnson Sts. Phones: Office ....... 58ow Residence 889. "PHONE 316 GODKIN'S LIVERY For Bus and Taxi Service, Buggies and Saddle HorSes, Bus for Cataraqui Cemetery dally ex- Saturday at 1.45 p.m. place of lord chief justice will fall to the occupant of the office of chair- man of the supreme court. There will be no more judges of assize throughout the country. They will be replaced by district judges hold- ing permanent courts with a juris- diction more extensive than any formerly exercised by the judges of the county courts, Toronto-Vancouver Freight Service, Brockville, June 20.--The steam- er Torhamvan, of the Kirkwood Line, was in port this evening, and loaded 75 tons of school desks, axes and general hardware, consigned by the James Smart Mfg. Plant, of the Can- ada Foundries and Forging Co, to Vancouver, B.C., by way of the Isth- mus of Panama, The Kirkwood Line initiated a direct package freight from Toronto to Vancouver by that route, and this was the first call here by any vessel belonging to the fleet. Two persons killed, upwards of twenty were injured, and property damage estimated at half a million dollars was done at Dickinson, in a heavy storm. Tweddell"s Suit Sale $15 to $332. ' \ LUCKIN'S SPECIALS ef elf - 132

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