Vv THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG i -- ---------- SMART FURS FOR 1926 ENSEMBLE FUR SCARFS" Of different Furs, and Siik and Fur combinations. - Hares, all colors. Priced at $6.50 and $7.50 Summer prices on orders placed now. Manufacturers Fine Furs ohs McKay Limited » CANADA Kingston FULL COURSE DINNER, 65¢ A LA CARTE MEALS Best food and excellent service. Queen's Orchestra in attendance every day 12 to 2 pm. * to 8 pm. and ® to 11 p.m. Lunches prepared _THE GRAND CAFE «= PETER LEE, Prop. MATTRESSES When housecleaning have your Mattresses cleaned and re- modelled. Go to Hughes' when you want a new ome at low price. Ww. H. HUGHES, o 403 PRINCESS STREET | William and Edward Anderson Thirty years ago this week two | Kingston citizens, William and Ed-| {ward Anderson, opened a smalll | grocery business on Division street {| near the head of Queen street. This | week they celebrate their thirtieth] | anniversary in business, but it is no| | longer in the little grocery store in| | which they started business, but i rather in one of the largest establish- | ments of its kind in this part of On- | tario. { The growth of Anderson Bros, | Ltd., has been amazing, indeed a romantic story of business. By care- ful and prudent management, by | foresight and ability, these two men have built up a trade and ex- panded their place of busihess till it is now of huge proportions. A MODLER'S BIG CLOTHING SALE We are offering the balance of our opening stock at prices that are TEMPTING, even though YOU do not need a new Suit. We purchased our opening stock at 80% discount, and are now selling at 10% discount off opening prices. Look anywhere and everywhere and you will find this is the store you will purchase your Suit. SUITS--regular price $45.00 to $50.00. Our price now cee... .$29.50 SUITS--regular price $35.00 to $45.00. Our pricenow . ...... ...$25.00 SUIT. S--Regular $25.00 to $35.00. r price now . . SUITS--Regular $18.50 to $22.50. rpricenow ..............$12.75 MODLER & CO. "eee The YOU BUY WHEN! e exceptional tone ity in the Weber Piano appeals to the ie CA hol : RSELF AND BE CONVINCED. LINDSAY'S Warerooms, Princess Street | building with a whole block front: | age, from Princess to Garrett streets | on Division, now houses their re- | tail department, and in many de- | partments behind the sales rooms the | large refrigeration plants and cook- | Ing rooms are located. Always looking ahead, Anderson i Bros. have been quick to install new j ime and labor saving machinery as soon as it was patented and put on | the market. An ever increasing pat- | ronage called for greater and great- | er service, and with every vear that | : i ; TUESDAY, JULY 21, 1085 § [Anderson Bros. Here Thirty Years: | Romantic Story of Business in Kingston Opened Small Grocery Store and Progress of Firm Has Been Wonderful--A | : Special Anni versary Sale. went by the sales force was increas- ed till mow it mumbers some forty men and women. Four motor trucks take care of the delivery in city and country districts, for Andersons' trading territory has been expanded till it pow includes much of the rural district around Kingston. One feature that has been stressed all through Anderson Bros.' long business career is that of "Service." The sales force has always been in- structed along the lines that satis- faction to the customer is the first and most important item, and with this in mind no effort has been spared to please the people who have gone to this store for their supplies. Service and satisfaction have won their reward, and to-day Anderson Bros. wait on a very large number of customers every day. To say just how many customers are waited on each day, however, would be to give away a valuable secret, for during the special - An- niversary Sale, which opens Thursday of this week and lasts till Saturday, three valuable prizes will be given each day of the Anmiver- sary Sale--Thursday, Friday, urday--to the customers guessing nearest to the actual number serv- ed. I These Days of Great Rush and Worry | Man Is In Much Need of Recreation Dr. W. T. MacOlement Deals With Interesting Subject at Kiwanis Club Luncheon--Recreation Qetting Back To Habits of Long Ago. "Why do we go fishing? Certainly not for the fi¥h. We go because for a | hundred thousand years, our ancestors | lived on fish, and catching fish was a daily duty." So Dr. W. T. MacClement, head of the department of biology at Queen's University and director of Queen's Summer School, explained from a scientific standpoint, why in these days of rush and worry, man needs recrea- tion, in a very entertaining address, at the luncheon of the Kingston Kiwanis Club, in the Hotel Frontenac, Mon- day noon. \ Only two thousand years ago we were savages, roaming out-of-doors, with never a care beyond oneself or his own family. Probably for 100.000 years we had lived such a life. It was a tremendous change to Se suddenly shut a man up in an office and to lay on him the burden of guiding a great business enterprise and tie him down with rulés and regulations. The strain of learning to work with others, the task on the mind of planning for the future, the holding of one's place in the structure of civilization that is con- stantly getting more complex were causes enough for the constant pres. ent in our midst of "The Tired Busi- ness Man." Many men's in their thirties, are showing signs of wear that should not be seen till old age. Recreation was getting 'back to the babits of long ago. Some go in for | horse-racing, probably because the | horse was man's friend for many gen- | erations. Others fish. The great piles | of bones and shells in the settlements portance of these forms of food in the early years. Even sleep is a return to nature, from the unnatural positior of standing erect. True recreation is to get away from civilization, to go out to the woods and lakes, to don soft clothing, and as little as possible, and to get under shelter of the simplest kind. It is to get back to the conditions of our an- cestors, and to catch, kill, cook and do : prehistoric days testify to the im- LT for oneself and forget the * 1 Queen's Summer School | | { Another dance will be held in Surprise, Comfort, Cold, P. sestessncnss 1 Sas vaa 1148.61 ass ensennan Bonen. "For rates andl information Mutual Life Policies see 5, ROUGHTON | A A A Red bay lendi e, id bryah, each 40. Cullen's AND CARRY li Grant Hall Friday night. On Monday next, the annual boat excursion is planned. The steamer Brockville will leave at 9.30 a.m. and {take the students to Glen Island, where the day will be spent, in plenie sports, the return being made in the evening. Thirty-lour students have signed their names as being desirous of tak- ing a course in dramatic art, which Was suggested by Mr. Gates, at last Thursday's business meeting. Au- other list is posted for the names of those interested in rugby. "Lis™§ 'Walker will act as coach. The tennis tournament is mow in tak-gatherer, the tailor and all the oth- er necessities of life. The boy, with his | peculiar fondness for living in a tree] and the like, was a real savage but only following after his ancestors. Civilization is only skin Scratch anybody, and you will find a savage. These instincts are kept in control normally by a higher and new- er part of the intellect. But this new part is weaker and it tires. Another form of recreation lies in the use of drugs, which work by acting on this higher intellect. Alcohol gives a feel- ing of well-being--"speaking from hear say", interjected the speaker--by par- alyzing the higher Centres and the in- dividual reverts to the savage, says and does what he likes and loses his anx- iety for the future. The modern «craze for narcotics and the demand for alco- hol are due to this fact--they reduce the strain. President #Billyll Maore thahked the speaker of the day very heartily, and invited him back again. Dr. Sparks in- troduced Dr, MacClement. Mr. T. M.eAsselstine, President of the Kingston Automobile Club, who is putting much time on the organization work in connection with the parades for Old Home Week, rides the Club, and outlined plans under way. The booster was Stewart Robinson, who was introduced by "Had" Her- rington, and whose prize, a silver to- bacco set, was won by Frank Day. "Billy" Mills reported that the flag- pole had been erected at the tourist camp, "a $200 pole for one hundred," by Capt. Donnelly.» All the spaces on the sign board but two, have béen sold. Harry Newman sent thanks for the flowers that the club sent him in hospital. The President told of a very grate- ful letter received from one of the four boys which the Club helped attend the camp at Eagle Lake. Bill Anderson collected the fines. Besides the two speakers, the guests included Rotarian "Jack" Elder, Rev. Dr. J. D. Ellis, fornierly pastor of Queen Street Church, and Kiwanian Campbell, of Montreal. laughter and brought forth much applause. M OLD BOYS' REUNION Union: Jacks, Canadian Ensign, American Stars and Stripes ALL SIZES COTTON PRINTED AND ENGLISH: BUNTING There will be a place your order with us now. FLAGS FOR HOMES, STORES AND STREETS WITH POLES. OORE'S TOYS SPORTING GOODS on | Sat- | deep. | Pictorial Magazine for August .. $1.25 each. Big Values in Towels COLORED TURKISH TOWELS 25 dozen Colored Turkish Towels, all extra sizes and splendid quality; your choice of light or dark colors. Specially priced 25¢. to WHITE TURKISH Towels; all big sizes hemmed ends. Extra value in White Turkish weight; some fringed, others ... 39¢c. each up TOWELS FANCY BORDER TOWELS Beautiful, fancy, Turkish Tow- els with pretty borders in Rose, Blue, Mauve or Gold; all sizes. 75c. to $1.25 each and heavy Extra values in LINEN HUCK TOWELS all pure Linen Huckaback Towels; good size, with hemmed or hemstitched ends." Special . ...... .... 35c. each up Beautiful Turkish Bath Mats ce ieee... $1.00 up Pictorial Fall Quarterly . . . . . .. Newman & Shaw THE ALWAYS BUSY STORE a Clearing Sale of Summer Millinery Parisian Shop 822 BROCK STREET THE MAKING OF TILE IS A HEALTHY JOB Nearly All Prisoners In the County Jall Put -on Weight. ticism of jail fare, the case is cited of a man at the Kingston jail gain- ing forty pounds during the six months that he spent there. Another man gained twenty-five pounds, in three months. It is said that nearly all prisoners put on weight in the local institution, though practically ---- [= puns Now Less July Discounts others consider it the right time to plan the remodelling of worn gar- ments or the 'ordering or buying of Furs from "Kingston 's Famous Fur Store" have an ever Increasing international reputation and we are ~ now daily showing Furs to patrons from far and near. 4 oo Some folks dislike the idea of even =, thinking about Furs in July, while { Regafding the Toronto Star's cri-|} all work, either at making concrete ||ji tile, cutting grass or doing other || | chores about the buildings. Even |[i R 1 Estat prisoners not required to do "hard |Ji ea e labor" prefer to get out and take fi exercise than to sit in their cells or wards. More factors than the jail diet en- |ter here. The men get plenty of sleep and live a regular life. Then in not a few cases their constitutions { have beén run down by more or less | dissipation before they are commit ! ted. | in all its branches -- Buying, Selling, Renting | | i | { { i YI 0 Ei Money to loan on first mors. 7 sage. ~ Houses for rent, A Five Insurance. E W. Mulia Cor, Johnson and Division Sts. LUCKIN'S Customers Please -- "I was late at the lecture last night and woulda't have knowed where Pa was settin' if I hadn't re-