Daily British Whig (1850), 18 Aug 1925, p. 3

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THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG 7 [RADIO BECOMES ALLY [:tscs ui Shiavsas OF RIFF REBELS was found beside the road in fromt| Besides being named in the dying! . « ment ted vy NENA NNN N RARE NENA NEARER > had | of the slayings, as the man they of the home of Charles Cromer, | | Operations Against France and | ! statement, Wolfe was identified by Paris, Aug. 18.--The use of radio saw in an automobile with a second WUESDAY, AUGUST 1s, 1025. PROBS: --Mostly fine and very warm Wednesday. Thunderstorms in a few localities. DIAMONDS Have Wonderful Possibilities To each person pur- chasing preserving supplies to the value whose wife was the only eyewitness | of the slayings. | Spain in Morocco Are [three citizens of Yorktown, a small | Directed by Wireless. [village between here and the scene ll a of 25 cents or over, we will give FREE one Metal Jar pack. PRESCRIPTION DRUGGIST 'Phone 50, Bateman's Real Estate Let us show you how the gems from your ring or old necklet may be re- mounted in new, attrac- tive settings. The cost is very moderate and the new Ring or Bar -Pin-- 1s" always most pleasing. Eo | | phone are Abd-el-Krim"s most pow- | BRICK BUNGALOW~---7 rooms, 8 pc. bath, electric light, double lot and location. - $2,000--Frame, 4 rooms, B. and T., electric Mght. ; Frame, 7 rooms, 3 p. bath, % Glectrio light and furnace. $4,000 -- Brick, semi-detached, : 00 = Brick detached, 3 gas, deep lot and garage. $5,000~-Brick, 6 rooms, 3p. bath, electric light and furnace, garage. $7,500~Brick, all modern, central. MONEY TO LOAN. © CUI BROKER ALL KINDS OF INSURANCE. 111% BROCK BT., KINGSLON FREIGHT DELIVERY A SPECIALTY Local asd long distance. All Motor Trucks with Air Tires. H. L. BRYANT Division Street. 'Phone 1753. For the next month, we will install GAS Pipes {inside the wall of your house. Auyone desiring to become a consumer of the best and cheapest fuel on the market, 'phone 1604 for full informa- tion. If it can be done with heat you can do it cheaper with GAS. Public Utilities Commission C. C. Folger, General Manager. | Electrical All kinds of Electric Wiring, Motor work, Bells and Repairs of all kinds. Electric Fixtures sale. : and Lamps for Electric and Acetylene Welding. We build smoke stacks, tanks and all kinds of sheet metal work. Plumbers' plies. and Steamfitters' sup- McKelvey & Birch * Limited {in military communications has been perfected by Abd-el-Krim, the | Riff leader, beyond any polnt hereto- | fore used in this type of warfare. The wireless telegraph and tele- { erful allies. | For two months I have been a | guest in the house of the Riff chief- tain. Day after day I have seen him and his aides working at their radio sets, and while I am not a technical man, I have gradually come to real- ize what an enormous part the radio is playing in the conduct. of the Riff campaign. Highly perfected German appar- atus is employed, both at base and in the fleld. The portable sets, used by the Riffian cavalry scouts, are very compact, fitting into a small leather case carried just behind the saddle. Krim himself uses a complicated 12- tube outfit, which in one large cab- inet combines all the necessary equipment for receiving and trans- mitting, either by telegraph or by telephone. : Back to Arabian Nights. In the hands of this skillful lead- er of the tribesmen, the radio has become a veritable reincarnation of one of the genii of the Arabian Nights, actually brought into service by the people who hundreds of years ago wove tales df just such miracu- lous, and then unbelievable happen- ings. Like Aladdin's lamp, there are today in all the remote frontline stations of the Riffian soldiers, these little lamps of radio which burn night and day, carrying back and forth the information which enables the tribesmen to strike swiftly and surely against their enemies. For many long months Abd-el- Krim has been fighting what seemed to all observers a- desperate battle against overwhelming odds, with the combined armies of France and Spain blockading him from contact with the outside world. Krim has overcome much of this handicap by use of the wireless. He has adopted the latest weapon of civilization to fight the armies of the western world. ? SEEKING SLAYER OF HANOCE AND HIS WIFE Anderson's Accomplice Is Held In Jall Under Bond of $100,000. Muncie, Ind.,, Aug. 18.--Seceral squads of police armed with high- powered shotguns slipped out of town late yesterday afternoon and headed toward Hartford City, Ind., where George (Dutch) Anderson, notorious criminal and slayer of Ben Hance and his wife, is reported to have been surrounded in a house. Hance and his wife were marked by Anderson as the betrayers of Gerald Chapman, notorious gun man and mail bandit. Hance furnished information which led to the arrest of Chapman last January, and testi- fied against Chapman in his trial for the slaying of a Comnecticut police officer. Charles Wolfe, Anderson's ac- complice, is held in the county jail under bond of $100,000. He refused to answer any ques- tions put to him by officers, al- though he has been grilled almost constantly since he was captured several hours after the shotting. Wolfe and Anderson . were both MRS. LOIS B. HARRIMAN READ THE ADVERTISEMENTS Wise Shoppers Do It LER'SBIG SALE . YOUNG MEN'S SUITS $18.50. THE WALES AND NEWPORT + Blue, Brown and Stripes. Are the latest -- regular value PRICE __. $1150 : BOYS' PURE WOOL ENGLISH SUITS Sizes 4 years to 11 years SALE PRICE $6.00--$11.00 "2158 SPORT MODELS 13 only to sell $16.50 We have 200 Sults--regular value $37.50 to $45.00--to At headquarters, Abd-el.| man, 'who answered tg~the descrip- tion of Anderson, m¥il robber and escaped federal prisoner. i | Picton, Aug. 17--Mr. and Mrs. Ross { Thompson of Detroit, motored to Pic- | { ton to visit ¥r. Thompson's parents, | Mr. and Mrs. Doney Thompson. Mrs. { Doney Thompson accompanied them | home going by way of Montreal where ! they srossed to go west through New | York- State. | George Young of New York is the | Mrs. W. T. Mc- | guest of his sister, | Quoid. -- | The funeral of the late John Mar-| {shall was held from the home of his | | daughter, Mrs. Deloss Spafford, on Friday afternoon and was largely at- tended, Deceased was known by prac- | tically every resident of Picton, having | driven the delivery for the A. Bristol {and Son store for many years after he labors. His cheery greeting and pleas- host of friends. Mr. Marshall was in his 90th year and had been active until just a few weeks before his death. Miss Grace Taft of Kingston, who has been visiting her brother, Dr. Vic- tor L- Taft at Ameliasburgh, is visiting the Misses Marion and Annie Hop- kins, Ena street. Miss Pearl Ready of Clergy street, Kingston, is with her grandmother, Mrs. William Hopkins, who is ill. Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Shevilte of Brook guests 4f Mrs. W. H. Markland and other friends. Floyd Sedgewick has gone to Syra- cuse, N.Y. Mrs. Hutchcroft and her daughter, Kinney. Miss Vera Vandusen of Osgoode Hall, Toronto, is spending her vaca- tion in Picton. W. D. Huff of Dexter, N.Y., was a recent guest of Mr. and Mrs. D. Lam- bert, Mary street west- Rev. John Hall and Mrs. Hall and the month of August. A. C. Dorland of Winnipeg is visit- ing Mrs. E. Foshay and other friends in the County. Misses Lottie; Sanders and Mina Cook of Kingston have been visiting Misses Marjorie and Dorothy Publow at the home of their aunt, Mrs. W, C. Gorsline. J. L- Graydon left this morning for Brantford to spend holidays with Mrs. Graydon's mother Mrs. Vanderlip. Alexander Davis of Winnipeg is holidaying with friends in Prince Ed- ward County. Miss Vera Leavens of Wellington has been spending the past week with her aunt, Mrs. 'George Bell, Ferguson St. : A masquerade dance will be held at | the Lakeshore House, .Sand Banks, Tuesday evening. Rev. Isaac Wilson conducted "Friends" Meeting" at the Meeting House, West Bloomfield, on Sunday. Rev. J. K. Holland of the Baptist Church conducted the service in St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church on Sunday morning, while in the evening the congregation went over to the Bap- tist Church to worship Miss M. Radford of Florida is spend- ing several weeks the guest of Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Healy. Miss Edith Heffernan of the Post Office staff is enjoying a boat trip with her brother, Captain Fred Heffernan. Mrs. Herbert Carson and Mrs. Gar- .net Harper and family of Toronto are guests of Mr. and Mrs. H. B. Tully and Miss Wright, and Mr. and Mrs: Lee Palmatier. Mrs. Alva Williamson has gone to St. Catharines to spend some time with her sister, Mrs. E. Scott. Miss Dorothy Kerfoot, R. N., New York, has gone on from Picton to vi- sit her parents, Major H, W. Kerfoot and family at their summer cottage on the Rideau. Miss Kerfoot while in town was the guest of her sister Mrs. Gor- don Walmsley and Mr, Waimsley Miss Joan Insley has gone to Water- town, N.Y. to spend some time with Mrs. May Desmarches. Mr. and Mrs. Stanley McKibbon of Chicago are renewing old acquaintan- ces in town and county. They have been the guests of Mr. McKibbon's sister, Mrs. George Knox, Queen street Master Richard Graydon has return- ed to his home after spending several | PICTON | = | became too aged for more strenuous | ant smile will be much missed by a| lyn, N.Y, motored to Picton and are| Mrs. Parker of Cleveland are guests of | Mrs. Hutchcroft's sister, Mrs. James Mrs. Lent are at O'Neill's camp for { weeks with his grandmother, Mrs. F. |B Women's and Misses' Fall Coats In an Introductory Showing T= groups of supremely smart models offer the first Coat fash- ions for autumn--fashions charming in grace of line, rich in color, in fine furs--and new, unique details of trimming. In each model, in the cut of the cloth, the colors, the treatment of the fur and its tones --one reads the newness and smartness of the fast approaching, new Fall season. T= advanced sale event presents a wonderful opportunity to se- cure first choice of the newest Fall Coats at feature prices that have been specially arranged. In each group, style and money val- ues are notable. at*39.75 A beautiful collection in Suede- finished Velours. The side-hip flare is uniquely different and de- cidedly youthful. In Reindeer, B Terrapin, Tortoise Shell, Black and Navy; collared and cuffed in natural or fox dyed Opossum. at *29.50 to *35 Rich, deep piled Marvellas and Duvetyns fashion the Coats in this group that stress their smart chic, in new shades of Green, Taupe, Brown, Mulberry, Mar- tin and Fitch dyed Opossum, show interesting treatment in Collars and Cuffs. Both Misses' and Women's sizes. : 3 at 49. 5 0 \ In Suede-finished Velours. The colorings are Pinetree, Navy, Black, Golden Oak, Dark Brown, Baby Fox--Muffalon, Crepe de Chene lined. > I

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