Daily British Whig (1850), 13 Mar 1926, p. 4

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Canadian Furs for Canadian Women FOXES In all the new colors. - Your inspection invited. John McKay Ltd. 149-157 BROCK STREET, KINGSTON ~~ When your doctor gives you a Prescription, we invite you to bring it here for. prompt attention. If your doctor wishes to 'phone the Prescrip- tion, request him to 'phone it here and we will fill it and deliver it to you. . Brani 268 Princess STORE rug im Phone 18 gan's D Seca Prices a Beds, Springs, ~ Mattresses. re bl dal dud dul dd LE Sh Ears daa LSE El i ad ol DububhchibaBiisa [Gla Gl dtd al Simmon's { { { WIFE APNCIPSP NL EFI YY WS TE TAI STAT ET E1213 v wr Sel Cable, Coil, Link Springs -- Felt and Ostermoor, Marshall Mattresses. 5 Robt. J. Reid Ambulance "Phone 577. Funeral Service. Best Motor equipment. et at A Bh ---- BRING YOUR BASKET SHOP AND SAVE Good, white Potatoes, pk. . .35¢ Island Roll. Butter 3 Choice Creamery Blue Rose Rice ... 8 514 Ibs. Rolled Oats .....25¢ 5 1b. pail Table Syrup. . .80¢. (Saturday) 1 can Cherries 19¢ Sugar and Ginger Cakes, 2 pounds for co BBC, Peko Blend, Tea, 1b. 62¢, Best quality Matches 3 for 28¢. L Soap . ....0 bars 50c. Salada, black or Green, 1b, 78¢. 4 1b. pail Marmalade. . ...40¢. 21bs. 85¢. 'SALE ONE HUNDRED "PANS aA) YI 4 ' 3 El ser who should do your Our de is your Defec- tive wiring often causes a disastrous fire. Let us serve you electrically -- you'll find you will have | { | f | ( ' { ( i | | \ | (J i { { ' ( ' { { ( ( { ( ! 1 ' | 4 { { i ( i ' 4 a |] a | | ia THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG HAS TREATMENT FOF HIGH BLOOD PRESSURE Dr. Macdonald, of St. Cath- arines, Tells of Results He Has Obtained. Another Canadian doctor, | promisés to make a valuable contri- | bution to medical science described | his researches at a post-graduate lec- [ture Friday afternoon, in the amphi- | theatre, General Hospital, before a |laige number of the medical stu- | dents, Medical College Staff and chy doctors. Dr. Macdonald, of St.. Cath- |arines, reviewed the results which | he has obtained in the treatment of | high blood pressure by an extract | prepared from the liver. High blood pressure is a rather | common trouble, especially in people {of advancing years. Not enly is it | Hable to lead to the bursting of a | blood vessel' in the brain, but it is {often more or less, connected with | kidney disease, and with hardening | of the arteries. The cause is still un- { known. Dr. Mac¢donald has discover- cd an extract obtainable from the liv- er, which in a good number of cases tried during the past year has Ibwer- ed the pressure of the blood to rea- sonable limits, and kept it there. The new substance is injected into the veins or muecles, or under the skin, and has recéntly been so improved that it causes no disturbances in the patient. One case he cited, was that of a doctor sixty-five years of age, vho developed high blood pressure, suffered two attacks of apoplexy and had to give up work. He tried the new treatment, and the pressure not only came down, but he is now carry- ing on as large a practice as before ard says he feels quite well. Still, Dr. Macdonald is very modest in his claims and desires many sued results with many Invetigators béfore- pro- ncuncing the treatment a success. Dr. W, T. Connell emphasized the importance of Dr. Macdonald's work, if the hopes for the extract see ful- fiiment. - who Sinclair Laird Issues Challenge. Dean Sinclair Laird of MacDonald College has agreed to back up his récent statement to the press that persons desiring can make a com- .chantering 'a special train for prehensive trip across Canada and back for no more than $330 by the purpose of accommodating all those who may be inclined to accept his challenge. He avers that the trip, which provides for stop-overs at all points of interest between Toronto and Victoria, westbound via the Canagan Lake and eastbound by the main line, including rail and water transportation, meals, accommoda- tion and all other expenses can be made as comprehensive as could pos- #ibly be desired, and he is prepared {o accept the amount stated, $330, as a blanket charge for all expenses. The Canadian . Pacific * Railway, which is interested in several all- expense tours this season, is acting as his booking agent. Dean Laird plans to leave Toronto July 19th. The route -he has planned is via Port Arthur and Fort William, Win- nipeg Beach, Winnipeg, Regina, Cal- gary, Banff, to Windermere across the Rockies by auto, to Kootenay Landing thence by steamer to Nel- son and through the Doukabour country to Hope and Vancouver. The réturn -fromr Victoria will be made via the Selkirks and Rockies and stop-overs have been arranged, among other places, at Lake Louiss and Devil's Gap Camp, Kenora. A trip across the Great Lakes to .Port McNicoll, thence rail to Toronto will terminate the exeursion. Dean ird contends that this trip will"not be an experiment as he has made two previous trips of like nature ag organizer of teachers tours. This trip he is throwing open to all and sundry, the only stipula- tion being that members of the special train party be chosen as be- ing compatible with the whole. Apply Dean Laird, MacDonald College, Ste. Anne de Bellevue, or any Canadian Pacific Agent. NEWS FROM DISTRICT Quiled From the Whig"s Many Bright Exchanges--Brief Items Full of Interest. Mrs. Betsy Rice Plumb, aged eigh- ty-nine; widow. of, Sanford Plumb of Clayton, N.Y., died Wednesday. The license fee for pedlars wish- ing to do business in Perth is dow $150, instead of $25 as formerly. | The death occurred at the home o rs. Selim Weeks, Consecon, of her brother, Delbert Rose. on Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Christie Young and family have moved into thelr mew home on the farm of N. B. Hamm, Bath. oa fo Eber Yates, Frankville, died on March 7th, aged seventy-oné years. He was born on the farm where he Mr. and Mrs. B.S. Byers will shortly take up residence in the C. Skinner house on Chureh streét, a Paton Brampton = Te. ior, Y on, died on y 'Robertson on Company, Limited, ie Mrs. 2 9 REATMENT FOR SERIOUS FIRE A a CALDERWCOD HOUSE! Annex to Officers' Resid Qutted by Fire Friday Afternoon. In some unaccountable manner, a | serious fire broke out on Friday af- | ternoon in the annex of Calderwood | House, Unjon street west. Calder- | wood House is used as an officers'; home and two families live there, the housé being occupied by ° Mr. W. G. Kear of the Royal Canadian Artillery and Major H. F. Geary of ment owns the building. Fortunately, no one was living in the annex. There had been no one ing of value in the annex outside of the furnace and a sfove. The fire spread rapidly and though the fire- men made a great fight, the beaver- board partitions which divided the annex into smaller sections, burned easily and caused very dense smoke. The fire was discovered by Major Geary in the roof of the annex, and an alarm' was quickly sent in to the fire stations.. However, the flames had reached such proportions that the R.C.H.A. The Dominion Govern-]. there since last fall. Therp was noth- | Saturday, March 13, 1926. RUGS f-- | { | i -------------- "BARRYMORE | RUGS * SHAW'S DAILY STORE NEWS Silk Hosiery Specially Priced Winsome Maid, eer esa ra Leading the Gold Dollar Silk and the pric -~ em A AS nly ness for thea each, Cha the fire-fighters found that the blaze had made great headway on them. Three lines of hose were 'laid from the motor pump to the burning building and two of these lines were kept going hard all the time. It was not long before the flames were un- der control, but before that time they had done their work rapidly and the roof was off the building and the inside completely gutted. The loss will run into four thousahd dollars. Fortunately the main sec- tion of the building was not afféct- ed by the fire. The asbestos roofing on the annex prevented sparks from 10 dozen and in the very much desired colors of Black; in brokien-sizes. | In Chiffon Silk Hose, ole beautiful as the name they carr Striped Turkish Towels ity and specially priced. Bi-Tex, Lined Sj] Regular $2.50 pai special is the k Hose of beauti Grey, Beige, Smoke, Pablo, r. For to-night's sale $1.75. procession of moderate priced ose. This popular line comes "Di y. Adding new pproach of Spring. They come in mpagne, Rose, Taupe. Extra value a size 20 x 40--of good qual- ful quality, Hosiery comes ghe in 15 perfect shadege. |i ana' -- graceful and Araeiauy color and distinctive- Gold, Toast, Nude, t.. .....$1.50 pair To-night 3 for $1.00 A clearin $2.00 value flying. ATTORNEY-GENERAL REFUSED TO ANSWER | Questions Put to Him With Regard to Release of Peter Smith. ° The Toronto Star says: Hon. W. F. Nickle stated last night that he had seen Pet Smith in the peni- tentiary last Saturday. The attor- ney-general refused to divulge the nature of the interview or its pur- pose. He would not deny nor would he confirm, the story that Mr. Smith's release is not far away. When asked if he were going to have a talk with Mrs. Peter Smith, Mr. Nickle replied that there was no use asking him any questions about the matter, because he didn't intend to answer. He was further - asked whether it were true that friends of Mr. Smith are presying r his release, and that the provinee Is not entirely unsympathetic and will con- sider it if Mr. Smith pays all he pos- sibly can toward the fine, but Mr. Nickle gave the same reply. Died In Perth Hospital, Samuél McVeetyf® Smith's Falls, district manager of the North Ame- rica Life Insurance 'Co., died in Perth hospital, on Monday night, from pernicious anaemia. He was for a time in the Kingston General Hospital. Deceased was born in Port S!msley, gon of Mrs. James McVeety, at present residing with her daugh- ter, Miss Annie Me¢Veety, Brockville. He leaves a wife who was formerly Miss Beatrice Campbell of Rideau Ferry, and three daughters Mona, Ledore and Oria, also his mother and sister of Brockville and another sister, Mrs. Chas. Gardiner of Dram- mond. 1 + The death occurred on Thursday of Mrs. Nancy Elizabeth Jones, wife of James Jones, Belleville. Deceased was the only daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs, Arthur Wensley and was born In Belleville in 1865. Dogs without tags are liable to be captured and destroyed. E. F. Anderson has sold his farm at Woodville to Norman Hudgin. CURTA INS Successors to | Newman & Shaw | MILLINERY OPENING Inspection invited Parisian Shop 322 BROCK STREET A Bishop Approves Sn & (Brookly, Kagle) Human natyre being what it is, the elders "put all the 'blamé for these mad young times ang cus- toms upon the children. Unéexpect- ed. though extraordinarily sagac- fous, #8 the support of the young- aters brought up by Bishop Hughes, presiding at the New Jersey Con- ference of the Methodist Episcopal church, He made an obvious Yeply to the too severe critics of hobbed hair and the grayheaded rebukers of the balloon trousers. He mentioned bangs, rats, bustles, Grecian bend, tight trousers and Dundreary whis- kers to back his stand that the .chil- dren may be giddy, but that they are orly following the footsteps of fath- ers and méthers who 'view with al- arm the Charleston garter and the coonskin coats of their offspring. The new generation is always the enthusiastic partisan of change. So I° was in the day of the koopskirt, and so it wil be for whatever 1930 has in store for us, The fright of par- euts over childlike waywardness PINK BROCADED WRAP AROUNDS g of this high grade line; in sizes 23 to 30. Our regula To-night, to you D. A. SHAW. Limited "THE ALWAYS BUSY STORE" dates back 'to the beginning of time. | jt is a sign of defeat, an acknowl- 1edgement that youth will have its | The tragedy of it all is the! vay. | misunderstanding engendered by the | coEtempt of the son and daughter | for a father and a mother who for- | get that they were-once young, too, and that they were once contemptu- ous of uncomprehending parents. The sum total of the generation is always the same. The addition of years makes Tories of us all. The increase in age also makes us blind ard forgetful. The Church has been criticizing the frivolities of our Perriots and Columhines from the year one, and the elders have been blaming all the evils of society upon a' heedless horde of children. The ironic part of it all is that the gay young things of today, will tomor- row. be raising the same hullabaloo abqut whither are we drifting. To view with alarm is the part of the o'ders. But it is refreshing that at least one high church dignitary can remember the days of his youth and appreciate the fact that essentially there is no.difference between .the ycuth of parent and child, The United Church, Picton, is op- posed to Rey. J. J. Miller undertak- ing the work 'of judge of the Prince Edward County Juvenile Court. 'The pastor said he did not wish his name considered if any froction was likely to arise. : Thomas Gale, Sudbury, is dead. He was a former teller in the Mereh- ants' Bank, Napanee. | $1.39 mn 4 = DOMINION | OILCLOTHS EL AAA 0) eT ------ or -- . This price reduced to the laughing point, New solid brick dwelling, ; rooms, attic floored, furnace, electric light, 8 piece bath. Good yard, for $3.500 $4,500--Stunart Street, brick. $5,200--Albert Street, brick bungalow. J oe $5,000-~7 room brick, all 'vo veniences (near the car line $5,500 Victoria Street, brick, 7 rooms, ences; garage. $4,800--New brick semi-bunga. low, 7 rooms, hot water, threé piece bath, garage. ! ! $4,000--New brick semi-bunga- | ow; 6 rooms, hot w. | plece bath. + ete 8 Come to the office for full list. E. W. Mullin Real Eqiate and Insurance Cor. Johnsgn and Division Sts. Phones 538, 539-w, 580.3. 4 J.B. SA Insurance n all convenis ht PRON, TTI SAILINGS | FROM ST. JOHN, N.B, ' | | | TO LIVERPOOL ] Mar. 12 Ap a » et me Metngama SOUT ON--ANTW ERE NAME. Mar, 18 ., rlogh; Kpr. 1... Apr. 15 4 Ask About Our Tourist . Third Cabin and European Tours Apply Loesl Agents ------ J. BE. PARKER Arent, Ocean Trafic Electric Motors 1 can furnish detail di sions and all particulars, cluding prices, for any size molor. Save time and mo 1 aud do your business locally. Gen. C.!

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