Daily British Whig (1850), 16 Sep 1924, p. 7

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- two strings to her bow, so much as two beans to her string. Fine feathers make fine birds and big dressmaker's bills. Chicken broth can never be ex- pected to satisfy as a substitute for XXX HENessy. 'Twas Ever Thus. Ralph: "There is only one thing my wife and I ever agree on," UNCENSORED RECOLLECTIONS "Amiable Indiscretions" One reviewer puts it so intimate that it has to be anonymous of high-up people in London and Paris. Price $3.50. R. Uglow & Co. English Golf Score Markers These are very well made--simple -- but give the true score --no slips. The Last Heat of Summer. AKTough September is officially a fall month, there is still Plcuty of chance for hot, summerlike weather. Before the sun passes much beyond |} the equator, cloudy nights foNowed by clear days can produce tempers- tures worthy of mid-summer. At this time of year the day is as long |Ji in temperate latitudes as it is at the equator, and in dry weather the sun may shine as Intensely. For, though the oblique rays here must Pass through a longer atmosphere, this may be offset by lack of shield- ing moisture in the air. At the equator humidity is high; there are no cloudless, dry days such as ours. September hot spells may be long, as there is a tendency for "highs" to stagnate over the cool valleys of |} the Appalachians. Day after day ||! south and southwest winds with clear skies» may prevail over a large part of central and eastern [|i North Amerjoa, With moderate to |i high temperatures over a wide I range of Jatitude, and with ocean and lake temperatures about up to the average of the day and night air temperatures, there are few ) marked contrasts at such times to |}! urge the pressure systems oast- |} wards or to produce storms and strong winds, But this last heat of summer is mitigited by the nights, which are longer and usually cooler, than earlier in the season. Thoughts is| of the brisk fall weather sure to follow also help us to bear the Sep- tember hot spell. Ladies' Patent and Highest Grade ' | Vici Kid Oxfords and Pumps Turn Soles, French Heels -- Bell and Smardon. These Shoes formerly sold for $7.50, $9.00 and some as high as $12.00. ne We admit the styles have changed, yet these Shoes make the prettiest evening shoes money can buy. We must clear them immediately, so offer them to you at : ONE DOLLAR It will pay you to buy 3 or 4 pairs. made by MONUHENTS a Monument, or having Letter | ing done in cemetery SER | J. E.Mulle 857 Frontenac St., Kingston | Phone 1417. 1] Hard Wood Choice Body Hardwood. Soft Mixed Wooa. Kinditog and Slabs. (Chas. Bedore & Son 840 NELSON STREET 'Phone 1746J. " GANANOQUE Sept. 16.--Mre. Isaac Scott and daughter, who have been visiting friends in Rome, N.Y., for the past ten days have returned home. Thomas Baker and Ralph Orser, who have been visiting friends in Syracuse, N.Y., and taking in' the state fair, have returned home. Bernard Kenney, Montreal, home on a visit to his father, Capt. Kenney. i The Kingston and Brockville baseball game to-day to decide the championship will take place at the Driving Park at 8 o'clock and prom- ises to bring pa large number of strangers to town. It will be a keen contest, Joseph Marshall of Napanee is re- newing aoquaintance among ' his Gananoque friends for a few ys. The horticultural society will hold its annual show at the town hall on Thursday, and Fridey of this week. Gananoque has something to be very proud of in its horticulturaf society which has done so much towards beautifying the tawn as well as justoring the spirit of horticulture among citizens. The show should receive a large patronage a3 no Victor: "I know, The fact that you should never have married each Mallow pink and larkspur hive, | Other, eb?" 1 Pansy, candy-tuft and phlox --Chis. Rehmann. Salpigiocssis, tever-few, 192¢ ¥ Lar shipper, golden-glow, ( Coprisat k: a oduction Fiowers of every form and look . Every one by name I know, ot When I see them . . . in the book. Readers are requested to comtri- e059 Ps roo] Bo By a A farmer's stock a cattle Stn Eat'l; urlesaten, entire ' mus A droker's stock is not, be original' and" unpubits hed Ace » | a A merchant's stock fs cloaks and from $1.00 to $10.00 Per contribution: Suits, id yd SL, nd fot Pasty Did you ever hear such rot? a but % us Potatoes have a hundred eyes, By ne Bdlcor oc me Fin Shop. . TS m wi Tt And yet they cannot eee; one 'side of the paper enly. saseiy A meedle ig as blind with one. bear name i th 2 aS Taba, It don't seem right to me! Head parters. Tio West ote butions conn 1Y: be those placessto spend your vacation where there were no mosquitoes?' Jean: "Yes, but I was stung." ~--Herman Woolf. Blue-Pencilled. Neighbor (meeting the iMtle boy mext door): "You're looking more and more like your father every day." Small Boy: "Way shouldn't 1? They mete me wear the old man's clothes cut down." : ----Clarence Bryan. PRODUCE MARKETS = Toronto. Toronto, Sept, 16.~Manitoba Wheat--No, 1 Northern, $1.51 1-3; No. 2 Northern, $1.47; No, 8 North- ern, $1.44 1-4. Manitoba oatse--No. 2 CW. 64 1-3¢; No. § C.W,, 68 1.2¢; extra No. 1/féed, 63 1-2¢; No. 1 feed, 62¢c; No, 2 feed, 60c. All the above c.i.f., bay ports. American form, track, Toronto-- No. 2 yellow, $1.40. Milifeed -- Delivered, Mcntreal freights, bags included: Bran, per ton, $27; shorts per ton, $20; mid- Kinnear & d'Esterre doubt it will, and for lovers of flow- dlings, 825; good feed flour, per JEWE RS 168 PRINCESS ST. ers and the fruits of the earth there bag, $3.05. ~~ will be something worth while in y Not A Beauty, the display. i : S00 NT 2x Tommy was industriously getting Miss Marie MoGivern, Toronto, is o tari eat--No. 3 Winter, : : . re dr ry en tie screams of | meting friends In Gananoque, and |, (riACle whearTNo 2 Winter | yoy are going to buy Furniture for present or the under boy in the fight brought | Grindstone Island. to $1.19; No, 1 Commdroial, $1.12 | use, no matter how little you need you need it a Wy Jeg TIOther to SHY SUA. Mri rold MoDarsey Iatt yester- LX0 3-137 NO. 3 GIRmErIle) AL long time. We have the kind that gives years of ptudies after spending the summer cent, patent, in jute bags, Montreal, guest of Miss Mary Donald for the patents, $7.40. 2 Steve nd Choate t | Egg, Coa f.0.b. bay ports, per ton, $38.54. SOWARDS COAL C0. Phone 155 "Why Tommy, you Mttie rascal!" |day with her little son to spend a cording to freights, { >t service at moderate prices. holidays with ber parepts,' Mr. and prompt shipment, $5.75; Toronto Past three weaks, Hay--No. ' 2 timothy, per ton, Small Hard l..........$12.50 per ton CFTOWN OFFICE: McGALL'S CIGAR STORE. PHONE s13. she cried, "what are you doing? Juet | month with her parents in Tweed. Barley--Malting, 78 to 81e. Mrs. W. T. Sampson; basis, $5.75, bulk seaboard, $5.50. Mr. and Mre. F'. W. Bell who have tragk, Toronto, $14; No. 3. $12.50. Buckwheat $ 9.00 per ton ' Montreal, They come in_lea- ther cases ... $2.00 Others from 50c. up. oA Tp Chola : KINGSTON HEADQUARTERS FOR FURNITURE DURING FAIR WEEK Meet your friends as opportunity beckons you, | = Dr. Waugh ot. Phone Wellington 256. | I ro -- Lr BRICK, STONE, PLASTERING AND TILE SETTING DOUGLAS & McILQUHAM CONTRACTORS JOBBING WORK A SPECIALTY. - PHONES 33670--038W, hie kite that you won't call him a beauty again for some time to come." ~-Isa Gertrude Bowen. BERR THE JINGLEJANGLE OOUNTER. Every charming girl's a gem; CK [mma DINNERWARE §.... om ; Than to de Sorever bused. : No-doubt you are in need of several «oe . pieces to replace those broken, or, you Ne sqoud make war lives sublime. But alas! we bayen't time, wish to increase the size of your set; © Sophie E. Redtord. our open stock patterns of Johnson White Mountains have returned home, While there Mr. and Mrs. Bell were the guests of Mf. W. 8. Mac- donald, Mrs. D. Ogden Jones, Toronto, re- turned home yesterday after spend- ing the past week at the supmer home of Captain and Mrs. N, C. Jones, Howe Island, Among the clergy ing 'Rev. Father Hanley with the Forty Hours Devotion are Rt. Rev. Mons. Harti- Ban, Fathers Keaney, O'Farrell, Scott, Carey, and J. T. Hanley. W. T. Sampson left to-day for soo the blood on Willie's beautiful Mise Betty Sampson returns to R 89 to 93c. little face." Trafalgar, Montreal, to resume her Ontario flour--New, ninety per| . aa ary Laue seturued 'trom| bas, 15.16, bulk sabosed, 4840.) * The Busy Store 1 Phone 147 Oshawa yesterday where she was the jute sacks, $7.90 per barrel; 2nd Th Cm - ----_. «++. .$16.00 per ton been spending a vacation in the Straw--Carlots, per ton, $9.50. Screenings--Standard, recieaned, Sees aie ce saint [1 car Semi-Anthracite Smokeless, suitable for Range or Furnace, $12.00 per ton, delivered Montreal, Sept. 16.--Oats, Cana- dian Western, No. 2, 69¢; do., Cana~ dian Western, No. 3, 68¢c; do., extrs No. 1 feed, 68¢; No. 2 looal white, 64 1-2¢. Flour, Man. Spring wheat patents, firsts, $7.80; do., seconds, t $7.30; do., strong bakers, $7.10; do., Winter patents, choice, $5.90 to $6. Rolled oats, bag 90 Ibs. $3.45 to $3.65. Bran, $27 to $26. Shorts, Seperal market review and agricul- | rose room of the Hotel Waldort- tural items. Astoria, New York City. 2 Fields and parks are pleasant places 11.15 a.m.--Concert by Daugher- 4-5 p.m.---~Moonkight instruments] | Toothpicks seek the open spaces. Brothers' English Dinnerware are ~--Bdmund Bartels. complete, and the prices lower than : © he ch . Shouldiyou want a complete dinner set we have them from te Star, The North: "Which actor in the play |: | did you like best?" mess from the ground up? West: "The one who gave me complimentary ticket." " ~--Philip Shafter, By Proxy. 1 lot!" sigh- oe sign, surrounded ns sad several billy- ~ Ups and Downs, Jill: "You pay he knows his busi. What 1s his business?" Bil: "He's an aviator." --B. C, B, A Mamie. Jack: "Have you got a loud epeak- erin your house?" John; *"No, but my daughter is a loud singer and that's enough." oe ~The problem of School Shoes will be ~ economically solved if you will let us outfit ens ere more expensive try chickens is to be found in the 5 --K. J B® Chickén Feed. Tle chief reason why city chick- than coun- New York. H. A, Stewart, K.C., M.P., was in town yesterday. W. BE. Brough, Brockville, was a visitor in town yesterday. Mrs. Crawford and little daughter, Enterprise, are the guests of Mrs. F. H, Lutz, Mr. and Mrs. Otto, Kingston, spent the week here on the river. 3 Sr -------------- \ On Prendergast, = daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James Prendergast, * Carleton Armstrong, son of Mr. John Arm- strong, also of Carleton Place. F. Chadwick .recen Wednesday, Miss Margaret Place, became the bride of Herbert | $29 to $26 Middlings, $35 to $28. Winnipeg, dS: Whast-N. 1 morthern, $1.40 3-4; No. 2 north- ern, $1.37 1-4; No. 3 northern, $1.- 84 3-4; No. 4, $1.27 1-4; No. 5, $1.17 3-4; No, 6, $1.00 3-4; feed, 1 $1.05 1-4; track, $1.38 3-4. Oats--No. £2 C.W,, 68 1-4c; No. 8 C.W., 57 1I-2¢; ox-No. 1 feed, 57 1-30; teed, 56 1-%c; No, 2 feed, 53%; rejected, §50¢c; drack, 68 1-4c. Barley--No. 8, C.W., 88 7-8¢c; No. 4 C.W,, 84 T-8¢c; rejected, 81 7-8¢; feed, 81 3-8¢c; track, 88 7-8¢c. Rye--~No. 1 C.W., 97 1-4c; track, 97 8-8c¢. . ' Flax--No. 1 N.W,, $2.19; No, 2 C.W., $2.15; No, 3 C.W., $1.78; re- | jected, $1.78; track, $2.18. : .& Ohicaga. \ Chicago, Bept. 16.--Wheat--No. 3 red, $1.30 3-4; No. 2 hard, $1.29 to $1.28 1-2; Wo. 4 hard, $1.22 1-4; sample grade hard, $1 to $1.02; No. 4 mixed, $1.22. Corn--No. 2 mixed, $1.30 $4; No. 3 mixed, $1.20; No. é mized, $1.- 17 3-4; No. 2 yellow, $1.30 1-2 to $1321 3-4; No. 3 yellow, $1.20 to $1.30 3-4; No. ¢ yellow, 31.19 1-3 to $1.20; No. 6 yellow, 41.19 1.2; No. § yellow, $1.17 1-2 to $1.18 1-2; No. 2 white, $1.20 3-4 to $1.21 3-4; No. 3 white, $1.20; No. 4 white, $1.- 19 1-4 to $1.30, Oats---No. 3 white, 50 1-4 to 50 1-2¢; No. 3 white, 48 to 48 3-f¢; No. 4 white, 46 to 46 1-4c; sample grade, dirt] 40 1-2 to 46 14e. Rye--$2.98. § TT ---- ty's orchestra, trio; children's stories. $1.29 1-4; No, 3 hard, $1.36 1-4 to | port. 12 noon--'"Stockmen" reports of the Pittaburgh lve stock and whole- sale produce markets. 3.16 p.m.--~Baseball by inning. 5 p.m.--Baseball scores. 8.30 p.m.--Dinned concert by the Pittsburgh Athletic Association or- chestra. 6 p.m.--Baseball scores, dinner concert. 8.30 p.m.--The Cifidren's Period ~{Wimble, the with his story-cap fs . - 6.46 p.m.--News bulletins. 7.40 p.m.--*Stookman" reports of the primary live stock and whole- sale produce markets. / 8 p.m.--Concert by the Broocket Concert Mixed Quartett. scores, inning -- WGY (880) SCHENECTADY, N.Y. 11.30 a.m.--Stock market reort. 11.40 a.m.--Produce market re- § p.m.--Produce and stook mark- ot quotations; news bujietins; buse- ball resuits. $5.30 p.m.-- "Adventure Story." WEAF (498) NEW YORK CITY. 11-12 a.m---Minnie Weil, pianist; young mother's programme; market and weather reports. . 4-5 p.m--~Bernard A. Ahrens, bar- ftone; Richard B. Gilbert, Tarapatch i Margaret 6-11 p.m.--Dinner muste from the rose room (of Hotel Waldof-Astorls, | ------ WIE (455) NEW YORK Ory. 5.30 p.m.--@tate and Federsl age ricultural reports; farm and home | reports; closing quotations of the New York Stock Bwchange; foreign exchanges quotations. x 7 p.m.--Belser's Cafe Boulevard ordhdnus. 8. P roaone ot Amaciss Revo. lution programme direst from Church of- Hed: Rest: musie br; Wiliam Weigel, | i . i choir; General speaker, 10.30 p.m, wick Village Inn onchestrs. J (428) CINCINNATL O, Pom. Ins'! given by the Duning Benevolent and Musical Service, co-operating | with Lilian Aldrich Thayer Setilé. ment Schoo! of Music, 8 pm---The Virginia Entertain. ors, presenting popular music sym. Pphonically. } 9 p.m.--Band concert, by the Tenth Infantry Band. Complete radio programmes sold at Canada Radio Stores, -- i Miss Agnes Loyst ' » Napanee, has secured the Junior room of Castles player; McKnight, so- prano ten school, and Jeft last week to as- sume her duties. . ¥ ou PADA APARTHENTS LINIED Dated Sept. lot, 1934. Due Sept. lot, 1900 to yield 008%. AND Price 981, for the "Shute ARD 1 i

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