Daily British Whig (1850), 5 Oct 1925, p. 5

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THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG Phone 316 |REPADT THIS MAR GODKIN'S LIVERY, - A DOZEN TIMES 4 3 For bus and inxi, buggies and saddle 5 Revsen. Bus for Catara ui Ceinetery "dally except Saturdsy and Monday St 2 pam. Also truck for moving. KINGSTON TRANSFER CO. Net Poe pr pe News From District Places POLITICIANS GETTING |[NAPANEE CHAMBER | DESERoNTO BUSY AT WELLINGTON| OF COMMERCE MEETS Scranton Anthracite: Egg, Stove, Chestnut, Pea Nut and Stove. oy and Buckwheat. VIRGINIA---Soft Lamp Coal, i Our Coal is all under cover om dry, clean concrete floors. i Deseronto, Oct..2. --Mr. Oscar Fit- om chell, down-town grocer, .who has } Uecitea, ment, Machinery, Safes, Pianos, etc. MONEY LOANED AGAINST MORTGAGES 'Phones 877. Evenings 2231. FOR SALE cold, undone, stomach didn't feel t, I had regular headaches and I had x have seen in my life. It has more than doubled my appetite, my stomach feels great and my general health is so improved that I can not praise Tanlac enough for what it hag done and is still doing for me." : 'What Tanlac has doné for others, it ca SMALL BRICK HOUSE, Stephen street. Bath and electric light. For terms and particulars apply at of- » General Insurance. Agent Great West Life Assurance Company, + R. H. Waddell 86 BROCK STREET Telephones 826 and Sve. Dr. Waugh DENTIST 106 Wellington St. Phone 256. PIANO TUNING Plano Tuning, Repairing and Player Plano Adjusting. - Norman H. Butcher, 27 Pine Street. 'PHONE 134. COAL Buy Virginia Coal -- no slate or stone Nut, Stove and Egg ....$15.50 Two carloads Alberta Coal to be sold while it lasts, $14.00. Aylsworth Bros. "Phone U. RB. Knight 1705w. do for you. Tanlac is for sale by all good druggists. Accept no substitute. Over 40 millions of bottles sold. Take Tanlac Vegetable Pills for consti- pation; made and recommended by the of Tanlac. TANLAC FOR YOUR HEALTH Are You Paying $4.00 for Your Ashes or 82¢ Your ash waste--you have known for Years by the ashes you také out every day. Our Welsh Coal has only 4% ash with no slate or stone, and the ash will only cost S3e, per ton. Try one ton of Welsh Cobbles and you will never use any other. W .A. MITCHELL & C0. Telephone 67, 16 Ontario St. DR. J. C.W. BROOM Dental Surgeon - 150 Wellington Street. 'Phone 679. Evenings by appointment. DR.W.A JONES Wellbroek Offices, 159 Wellington St. Telephone 2714. DR. RUPERT P. MILLAN DENTIST §4 Princess Street: 'Phone 1550 Gas for Valnless Ext: OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT Phonographs, 3 repaired and refitted. Parts supplied. Saws fled, knives, issors and edge tools OUR COAL Makes Others Happy || Why Not You ? NOW is the time to let us fill your Coal Bin and make you as happy as a lark. Do not put it off any longer. BOOTH & CO. Phone 133. Grove Inn Yard WATTS, Florist - When you want the best fn Cat call WATTS' 1763 Stove, 1387 resid ence; - Bole.member of Florist Tele. i aon Delivery for Kingston ; outsot<town 'orders so- Your Wie | "M.T. Co.'s Blevator. "FOR SALE Hl Cooked Ham $18.50 Reg. value $25.00. Sizes 36 to 44. All the latest styles and colors, ° | Windsor Bacon one rans 880, - Pot. Roast i eiilBe The Parties Are Holding Meet- ings--Lecture on "Robert Burns." Wellington, Oct. 3.--Local poli- ticians are beginning to get busy. The Liberal Conservative Association held an organization meeting in the town hall on Friday, Sept. 25th: 'Everet Hubbs was chairman, and Mrs. J. H. Davidson, secretary. John Hubbs, the candidate, Mrs. Fallis, provincial organizer of the Ladies' Association, and Horace Colliver spoke. The ladies' and meg's or- ganizations are merged under one list of officers, A political masg meeting in the in- terests of Mr. Sexsmith was announe- ed for Wellington, on Friday even- ing. At the United Church Sunday school there was a good programme for Rally Day, last Sunday. On Mon- day evening, Rev. W. J. H. Smyth delivered an* interesting lecture on "Robert Burns," under the auspices of the Young People's League. Miss Anne Bronson was in the chair, Mrs. Vera Teal read part of "The Cotter's Saturday Night," and L. C. Murphy read two of Burns' poems. Solos were given by Miss Hilda Tait, Miss Helen Way, and Mr. Garnet Taylor. Jack Lansbury, who spent part of his vacation at home with his par- ents, returned to Queen's University on Monday. Mrs. Chase is nursing her sister-in-law at Consecon. Mrs. Lavina! Dorland returned from a visit to her son, Prof. A. G. Dorland, London, Ont. Harry Jolley, inspector of ceme- teries in the county, is doing his ut- most to get every neglected cemetery put into shape. A great transforma- tion has taken place in Wellington cemetery, and improvement work is now going on at Chadsey cemetery. On Monday evening Mr. Jolley was at a meeting at Bloomfield when steps were taken to put the Friends' burial ground there in shape. There was born to Mr. and Mrs. Elwood Cronk, a daughter; en Sept. 23rd. William .Donavan spent a couple of weeks visiting his sister, Mrs. Kirk, at Gananoque, and. re- turned home this week. Miss Hélen Way, Bethel, spent the week-end with Miss Winifred Pearce. 'Mr. And Mrs. Edward Nelson and family, from Wooler, visited Walter Nelson on Sunday. Mr. (and Mrs. David Gowdy, Colebrooke, Mr. and Mrs. George Timmerman and their son, Percy, Moscow, visited James Wild on Sunday, Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Wilder and daughter returned from a trip to To- ronto and Michigan. ' Miss Eileen Wilder had a trip to Buffalo and To- ronto. Miss Mona Clinton fs ser- fously ill at her home in Wellington. Ted Green, Belleville, is visiting Mr, and Mrs. B. A. Fanning, FORRESTER-MURRAY. Nuptials Took Place at Brewer's Mills on September 20th. On Tuesday morning, Sept. 29th, at 9 o'clock, a pretty wedding was Solemnized at 'Barnaby's church, Brewer's Mills, when Anna Gertrude, daughter of Mr. M. L, Forrester, and the late Mrs. Forrester, Seeley's Bay, was united in marriage to William H. Murray, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Murray, Brewer's Mills. The bride entered the church on the arm of her father. She looked charming in a Davy poiret twill tailored costume, a small sand hat with sand plume and & mink choker. She wore the groom's git, a pearl necklace, and a corsage bouquet of Ophelia roses and maiden hair fern. ' Her sister, Miss Theresa Forrester, was bridesmaid and wore & black velvet suit with gold trim. mings. and a black velvet hat. Mr, Mathew Murray, brother of the groom, was best man. The groom's gift to the bridesmaid was a rhine- stone bracelet and to the best' man a silver pencil. Immediately 'after the ceremony they returned to the bride's home where a dainty wedding breakfast two awaited them. The table was cen- tred with the wedding cake. The color scene was mauve , and white with mauve and white asters in tall vases decorajing the table. ' Mr. and Mrs. Murray left on their ane trip Which: will include _ visits to onto, Niagara Falls, Buffalo and Detroit. They were the Xecipents of many beauti- ful gifts, Sk ; ht ch age notaing seems to With one man it is a grudge; with th three or more i To Prepare for Poultry Far | --Presentation of Cup and Medals. | ated first fall meeting of the Napanee Chamber of Commerce at 6.30 p.m. Saturday in the Paisley House. At that hour dinner was served and ex- cellent music furnished by the Char- lie Walters orchestra. Amongst the good resolutions of the Chamber were: That in the near future Napanee merchants would observe twin dollar days; that 'at Christmas time, the streets would P be gaily decorated and illuminated; and that as there was an abundance of poultry in the surrounding coun- try arrangements would be made for poultry days towards the end of November. An interesting episode in the evening's proceedings 'was the pre- sentation of cup and medals by Dr. C. M. Stratton, the donor, to P. Mer- ritt, Leslie Merritt and Lewis Lloyd, winners for their township, in the competition of stock judging at the Lennox Fair this fall. Mr. J. Laughland presented individual medals to Percy Merritt, who took first place 'at the fair as a judge of dairy cattle; to Leslie Merritt, ag an expert judge of horses; and to Lewis Lloyd for being best in the judging of swine. Dan Shaugnessy was first in the judging of beef cat- tle and had the highest individual mark of any boy in the contest. Harold Lloyd was best judge of sheep. Mr. J. W. Robinson then intro- ductde the speaker of the evening, Mr. A. F. Hansuld, a member of the Ross-Miller Biscuit Company, Nap- anee, Mr. Hansuld's subject was Prince Edward Island and Fox Industry, ------ day, days. Dryden. affairs, | OBITUARY || Mrs. Jessie Lane Dies. Mrs. Jessie Lane, aged thirty- seven, wife of Claude Lane, Brown- ville, N.Y., died at Watertown, N.Y, on Wednesday morning, after having been a patient at the hospital since Monday night. Mrs, Lane was born on Wolfe 'Island, Aug. 2nd, 1888, daughter of the late Malcolm and Jettie Conley McDonald, and moved to New York state when she was twelve years of age. She married Claude Lane, 6f Brownville, about 15 years ago.. Mrs. Lane is survived by her husband, five sons, Gerald, Don- ald, George, Robert and Jack and one daughter, Betty, all of .Brown- ville, one sister, Mrs. Kate Tucker, of Ilion. She is also survived by her stepmother; Mrs. Thomas Dee, Wolfe Island; five half brothers, among them Arthur Gordon and Howard McDonald, Wolfe Island; and four half sisters, among them Misses Jane and Bulalia McDonald, 'Wolfe Island, ° I ---------------- « « TWINS AT CATARAQUL 4 Two Homes Have a Boy and Girl Each. Cataraqui, Oct. 3.--On these dull afternoon the electric lights in the school house, are called into ser- vice. F, A, Smith, B.A., conducted the services in Christ Church, last Sunday, in the absence of his father. Cataraquf's population is in- creasing. Mr. and Mrs. H. Nokes, and Mr, and Mrs. T. Burteh, have each been presented with a pair of twins, a boy and girl in each case, and: Mr. and Mrs. Charles Purdy, Jr., have a young son. Colin Clark, of the Customs House, is spending a holiday in Montreal. Four teachers, Mrs. Saunders, Miss Carman, Miss Mec- Iiraith and Miss D. Cooke, have gone to Ottawa. Some of the build ings at the Rectory are being shing- led. Dr. Cooper has returned after spending a week in Chicage, as the guest 'of his: brother, Dr. A, Cooper. The young people are taking great Interest in Mr. Hill's singing class, which meets every Tuesday evening, | ------------ THE OFFICERS CHOSEN. For the Prince Edward County Picton, Oct. 5.--In sions were held by the Prince a County Teachers' Institute Ww. the organization held its an- fual convention Thursday and Fri- day. The principal speakers were Dr, Karr, ir of raral ses- Bd- oi EX school . Becker of the Club. Because of | the death of his brother, D, Walker, been suffering from quinsy, | improving. { holidays in Hamf{iton, and was one of --r the t 5 . Napanee, Oct. 5.--There was a he lee Pare ding of her coy large attendance of members at the Mrs. Naney Harvey, street, who was ailing for some time, pagsed away on Wednesday. Frank Cronk, of Northport, was a business caller in town on Thurs- Mr. and Mrs. J. McCreadie and Miss Mary; of Ottawa, are visiting Mrs. Rowsome this week. a Mr. and Mrs. Harry Wednesday in Kingston. Mrs. McKuen is the guest of har sister. Mrs. A. Harband, for a few Miss Annie Young, of Napanee is spending a week with Mrs. M. A. Miss Myrtle Uens is visiting friends in Picton for a few weeks. Stanley Blake has secured a posi- tion fn Toronto. . J. Rainsford Sprague in Scribner's Magazine: International business de- pends largely on English, long experienced in world it is not fer Prince is sent on long journeys show himself to the people of other countries. . , is slowly Alice Cole is spending her S. ANGLIN CO. LIMITED Woodworking Factory, Lamber Yards, Coal Bins of Dundas Telephone: Private Branch Exchange, No. 1871 BAY AND WELLINGTON STREETS, KINGSTON, ONTARIO Gordon spent monstrations arranged. NOW IN STOCK -------------- The Prince Abroad. Loudspeaker. CANADA 269% PRINCESS STRE RADIO good-will, The understand this thoroughly; The R-5 is a real set--both In performance and looks' Dee 2 Easy terms of payment if you wish. i New fall Issue of "Citizens Radio Call Book™ The Jewett s TELEPHONE 1207. THE RADIO HEADQUARTERS OF EASTERN ONTARIO nothing that their to manufacturers in a single trip than the many ghiploads of American creates: more business for i . Doubtless the Prince young ladies sent abroad each ¥y as"a result of Chamber of Comm popularity-vote contests, ~------. ~~ NW . YY, = = ail NM \ Toe \ Under the Shadow VER YOUR HOME IT HANGS... the mortgage which made your ownership possible. It is your hope to see it fade gradually away until the home is yours..free of encumbrance. _ But if your presence should be re- moved..what then ? : Will the threatening cloud descend to engulf the home and plunge your loved ones into need and privation ? 2 Then, whether you be here or not, the home is --your loved ones are secure. : It is easy thus detail of the plan. ia

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