Daily British Whig (1850), 11 May 1926, p. 9

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4 DAYS STARTING WEDNESDAY = | > nS SOLE ve LAUYD AS AN UPLIFTER, Ho Frias re a AUGHTER...A COMEDY WITH "NHS LATEST FOR | Harold Lloyd. AM USEMENTS What the Press Agents Say About Coming Attractions HUMAN NOTE DOMINANT IN "FOR HEAVEN'S SAKE." Helpful Idea Underlies Hilarious Fun in New Harold Lloyd Film. The humaniszation of screen com- {edy can be directly attributed to He, more than aay has the individuals in filmdom, responsible for lifting | "slapstick and elevating them to i | the high plane they enjoy to-day. The process of evolution, which ll has been steadily advanced through |! "Grandma's Boy," Hi "Girl Shy," "Hot Water" and "The COMEDY i! EAVENS ll photoplay an appealing flavor. i SA CE. Tv _TO-NIGHT--A CONNEOTIOUT YANKEE IN KING ARTHUR'S GOURT court || i BEST SERVICE IN 20 CITY Phone 64 T AX] TAY] RELIABLE ¢3 SERVICE , PHONE 1900 Trips to Belleville or Brockville, 4 Passengers, 134 hour stop, $15.00. Geo. Sleeman, 852 Frontenac Street. | 'Walter Cannem | 'Pinsmith, Roofing and Furnace Wark Jobhing a Specialty. Automobile Radiators repaired and vecored. 69 BAGOT ST, HAS BEEN OPENED BY | MISS LOUISE (Formerly of Ritz Beauty Parlor) AT FLLIOTT'S BARBER SHOP 384 Princess 8... ; Phone Princess St. 'Phone 821-w, T, TA VI BLACKS 1 ANY ae Oc IN THE CITY 'Phone 1890, | WHITE Phone 400 25¢ =e: SALE! . Hard and Soft Cord Wood TO MAKE ROOM FOR BUILD- ING: EXTENSIONS Highway Service & Co. Cor. Princess and Smith Streats PHONE 2706. g BUS FOR OATARA Ul CEMETERY will commence AY, April 25th, leaving at 2 p.m. Godkin's Livery Phone 310, Queen oxy re aa CHECKER Taxicabs Phone 800 Auy place in elty DAY OR NIGHT The cab err 25¢ New Beauty Parlor i oo ASSISTED IMMIGRATION. Figures for Eleven Given in Commons. { Ottawa, May |costs come up in the House of Com- mons yesterday. In answer to iquestion it was stated that in the leleven months ended February 28th {last, the federal government contri- [buted $247,630 in assisting ocean or | railway passages for immigrants, Of | jour $230,703 are recoverable loans. | Assistance for land settlement of | [lmmigrans cost another $284,725 in |that period, and assistance in the {keep of immigrants cost the federal {government $13,161. F. J. Lee died at Lee Valley, Ont., jon April 24th, aged seventy-six| |years. He formerly lived at Mallory- {town. One daughter is Mrs. George | | Edgeley, Lyn, and a sister Mrs. _Ro- | pert Avery, Mallorytown. "Tenders Wanted Cost Months | Addressed to C. H. MAYBEE, Secre- jtary-Treasurer. Sydenham High School, | for 40 tons of hard Coal to be placed in | the basement of Sydenham High School y All ccal to be weighed by the success- | ful tender. TENDERS FOR DREDGING Sealed tenders, addressed to the un Gersigned and endorsed "Tender for dredging, Toronto, Ont." will hen Jecetva od urs #l 12 o'cloék nogn (dayll ing), Thursday, May 20th, 19 il Tenders will not be considered unless made on the forms supplied by the De-| partment and In accordance with the conditions set forth therein. Combined specification aid form of tender can be obtained on Psppiication to the undersigned, also at the office of the Distriot Engineer, Equity Build- ng Toronto, Ont. enders must include the towing of the plant to and from the work. The dredges and other plant which are intend to be used on the work shall have been duly registered in Can- ada at the time of the filing of the tender with the Department, or shall have been built In Canada after the fling of the tender. Each tender mus. be accompanied by Ah Rocepted cheque on & chartered bank payable to t order of the Min- eter of Public Works, for 5 per cent. of. ithe contract price, but no cheque to be for less than fifteen hundred aol lars. Bonds of the Dominion of Cane ada and bonds of the Canadian National Raliway Company wiil be accepted as security, or bonds and & cheque If re- quired to ake up an odd amount By Stder, BB. O'BRIEN, cretary. Department of Public Works, " Ottawa, May 10th, 1926. Et a In time of need, pure Ice from the Lake Ontario Ice Co. will help you out. 'Phone 1878. Beverly Street. J. CAMPBELL & SON Ne FITOL CAFE: 11.--Immigration | OBITUARY Mrs. Joseph Sauve, | Kingston lost a good resident ear- | ly on Tuesday morning, when Ade-| line Trottier, widow. of the late {Joseph Sauve, passed away at her! | home, 29 Clergy street west, at 8 a.m. following a lengthy illness. Deceased had been a resident of | Kingston for the past eleven years, | dence in Kingston, lived on Garden | Island. Mrs. Sauve was known to a! | wide circle of friends in Kingston | | and this district, and held the warm esteem of all her friends and ac- | quaintances. Deceased was in her | elghty-second year, | The late Mrs. Sauve is survived by three daughters, Mrs. Willlam Val- I ade, Montreal; Mrs. Francis Beau- | bien, Gananoque; Mrs. Joseph Beau- | blen, Howe Island: three sons, Jos- | éph, at home; Capt. Cyril and Thos, {also of Kingston; two brothers, An- | tolne Trottier, Montreal; Cyril Ttot- | tier, Coteau du Lac, Québec, and one | sister, Mrs. Abraham Lalonde, of | Quebec. The funeral will take place on Thursday morning to Wolfe Island. | REMINISCENCES BY PROF. V. JORDAN {and previous to taking up her resi- | "Salety Last" Freshman" is continued with his in- itial Paramotint release appropriate- ly entitled "For Heaven's Sake!" Advance reports indicate that the {human note so dominant in all of Lloyd's previous productions is (again a fundamental factor in his (latest comedy. Underlying the up- | roarjous fun.and comie foolery is a wholesome thought that' gives the | Briefly, the story is that of a | rich Boy who discovers after a life {of idle ease and luxury that real {happiness is to be found in helping ! others. His experiences in the slums {of a big city, where he goes to as- sist a hard-working, though none too successful missionary, are hysteri. cally humorous, yét get over the {thought Lloyd sought to impress |when he started to make the ple- '| ture. Jobyna Ralston, who added femi- {hine distinction to several of Lloyd's i former sultTésses, again lends her | charm and beauty to the role of lead- ing lady. It is for love of her that Harold goes through many laughable | trials and tribulations in his effort |to reform a group of hardboiled | gatgsters. "For Heaven's Sake" will open a four day's engagement at |the Capitol, Wednesday, with a iepecial morning matinee, Saturday, | tor children. Lorenzo Beal, one of Smith's Falls' oldest citizens, died on Saturday, after a long illness at the age of eighty years. He leaves two daugh- ters and five sons. !" Miss C. Catton, superintendent of Ithe Cottage Hospital for the past nine years, has handed her resigna- tion to the board of governors. At the annual meeting of the Pem- broke Golf Club E. A. Dunlop was elected to the présidency. The sec retary is J. M. Beatty. Buy your Bicycles from H. Milne, Bagot street, phone 6542. Hyslop, C. C. M., Eagle Bicycles. . William Daze has been appointed assessor in Arnprior at a salary of $300. a - In an article The Toronto Globe fa on "Convocation Time." Dr. W. G. | Jordan, of Queen's University says: | When approaching the end of a | public career, one is apt to yield to | the reminiscent mood. The reminder that dotage and anecdotage are peri- iously near the each other cannot alter the fact that to those who are y growing old the past is rich in mem- orles and the future too short to stimulate ambitious plans. One some- times wonders why, after a long day's work, we are reluctant to quit the scene of our activities. I met a gentleman once who told me that if it was not for golf he would have to go bdck to business. But I think that the devotees of golf will always be a small proportion of the commun- ity; Students of science and history tell us that ten years have been ad- ded to the life of men who live in healthful conditions, so that the Psalmist's '"'threescore yeéars and ten" should not bi taken too liter ally, and that the Church's formula "sick or seventy" may, ii some cases need little revision. Still, we must remember that when we say to our selves: "In some respects { am as good as ever," this may be a kindly illusion of nature meant to let us down gently. But why linger 20 long over a preliminary point? Let us get to the Convocation. About this time of the year 1899 there appeared in The Globe a re- port of Queen's Convocation, the first that I attended. The university had seen fit to make me one of its honorary graduates, and the reasons were given by Dr. G. M. Milligan of Toronto, then in his .prime, whose generous tribute made ome realize the difficulties of living up to the expectations of one's friends. Promi- nent figures on that day were Barl Minto, Principal G. M. Grant, Arch bishop Gautier and Senator Sullivan. The recollection is still fresh of ar- have a tara. men h Kingston to larger things. The fifty thousand dollars given for "Kingston Hall" was cer- tainly a good investment for the city and the college. It would probably cost three times that sum today. In those days, we laid emphasis on the fact that it is pot buildings but men that make a university, a fact that still needs to be remember- ed. My mind turns back to the men | going forward boldly with whom I came first into contact, Watson, Dupuis, Cappon, Goodwin, Mowat, Ross, Knight, Short, Mac- naughton, to mention only those who have since retired or turned to other fields of service. These men Work- ing together, would give distinctinn to any arts faculty.. Of Dr. D. M. Gordon, who for sixteen years acted as Principal, of Queen's, afd in whose reign the constitutional chan- ges took place, it is gimply necessary to say that he falfilled one's fleal of a cultured Christian gentlemh A ufijversity with such ® history must, if true to its traditions, have a great future in a country shat will seed higher ednoation more and more as time goes on. An "Asset for Christianity." In those days I made a visit to Ca- nada's largest city, and was iaken to see an editor. Having great respect for editors, I had looked forward to this, but when the gentleman Jaunch- ed out into a vigorous denunciation of institutions and conditions my young friend the réporter felt rath- er uncomfortable, But, my love of the truth being stronger than my fear of editors, I quietly told the mil of Queen's as I understood it, of el working for their college and not for the bare living that it was then only able to give, and of "boys™ get- -- HOSPITAL GRADUATES AND PRIZE WINNERS The following is thie list of grad- uate nurses and prize-winners at the Kingston General Hospital: Sarah Geergina Acheson, Elgin. Amy Edwyna Ada, Kingston. Ethel Davis Baxter, Kingston, R.R. No. 2. Frances Alice Brown, West. Charlotte Alice Burton, Falls. Bertha Irene Barlow, Belleville. Glenna Lillian Booth, Brockville. Lavina Ballantyné, Lanark. Muriel Bishop, Peterboro. Adelaide Winnifred South Mountain, Florence Myrtle Francis, ville. Amy Dorothy Garner, smith. ; Eleanor Isabel Gates, Kingston. Mabel Deette Hollingsworth, Brockville. Vera Jane Manders, Perth. Ednah Mary McLeod, Chapleau. Sadie Kathyrn Nuttall, Port Rigin. Ruth Purvis Nash, Kingston. Biva Ismay Polk, Kingston, Susan Thompson Patterson, Kingston. Gladys Lillian noque, R.R. No. 8. Margaret Ruth Sansome, Jasper. Florence May Storey, Napanee. Muriel Euphemia Toland, Sunv bury. Anna Elizabeth Warner, Yarker. Helen Victoria Woodhouse, King- ston. Edna' Carp. Ethel Dorothy Wemp, Stella, R.R. No. 2. Lelia Emma Wedden, Belleville, Niagara Francis, Belle. Harrow- Ranous, Gana- Jane Alexandra Wilson, Prize Winners. General Ross Gold Medal, Miss Adelaide Francis. -Hon. W. F. Nickle Silver Medal won by Miss Badie Nuttall. Board of Governors' Prize, won by Miss Adelalde Francis. Intermediate Class Prize, won by Miss McBroom; honor, Miss Mitchell. Board of Governors' Prize (inter- mediate), won by Miss Miriam Mitchell. Intermediate® Class _Prizes--Diete- tics, won by Miss Gladys McBroom; honor, Miss Mitchell. Prise in medi- cine, won by Miss Mitchell. Prize in practical nursing, won by Miss I. Wesley, Maberley; honors, Miss Mitchell and Miss McBroom. Prise in surgery, won by Miss Agnes Moun- teer, Kingston, Bacteriology, won by Miss Fern Barker; surgical tech- nigue, won by Miss Véreen Kelusky. 'Senior Class Prizes--Diseases' of children, won by Miss Sadie Nuttall; pMiss Amy Ada; general profession, massage, won by Miss Baxter; sug- gestions on co-operation, won by «Junior. Clags Prises--(1) Pragti- won by Miss Ruth Sansome; fire drill, won by Miss Ruth Nash. Junior Class Prizes--(1) Practi- cal nursing, won by Miss Phoebe Smith; (2), won by Miss Mabel Bot- ting. won by Ladies' Softball League. A meeting of the Kingston Ladies' Softball League was held at the Y. M.C.A. on Monday evening, Mrs. T. Wilson presiding. It was decided that the schedule would open next Monday evening, with the Supremes playing the Treasures and the Y.M. C.A. "B" Team opposing St. Paul's at the Cricket Field. The schedule for the other games will be drawn up at another meeting. The League was advised that a beautiful trophy has been donated by Pappas Bros., for the winner of the League. The election of officers resulted as follows: Président, Mra. T. Wilson; vice-president, Miss RX. MeCullough? secretary-treasurer, Miss E. Turner. Girl Killed By Train. Brockville, May 11---Miss Lillian Stephenson, aged 17, ployed in the Caldwell linen mill at Iroquois, was instantly killed at noon today when she was struck by the Inter- national limited, while upon her way home to dinner. ------------------ Rev. A. H. Going has purchased the house belonging to Lyman Hum- phries, Renfrew. Bonn msn } NM Richmond. STOCK MARKETS | (Reported by Johnston & Ward, corner King and Clarence Streets, members. of the Montreal and Toronto Stock Exchapges). New York: May 11--1.30 p.m. Amer. Loco.. .. Amer. Can. "s Baldwin Loco. . B.&O:. .. .% California Pete. C. PR. Chrysler. . . General Motors. . Hudson Motors. . Inter. Comb. Eng.. Inter. Nickel. . Mack Truck.. Marland Ofl.. Ne XQooo vind anne Northern Pacific... .. «+ Pan. Amer. Pete "B".. Pierce Arrow.... .. Pierce Pete. . Sou. Railway. . Sinelair Ofl.. . Standard Oil of Studebaker. . Texas Ofl.. > Union Pacific .... U. 8. Rubber... U. 8. Steel. . White Motors, . Woolworth. . MONTREAL. NI... May 11, 1.30 p.m, Abitibi Power Asbestos Com. Asbestos Ptd. Bell Telephone Brazil .... Brompton Can. Cement Com, Can. Cement Pd. Dom. Bridge Dom. Textile Hollinger Ind. Aleohol Laurentide .... Mackay . on Montreal Power I. National Breweries Com National Breweries Pfd. Ogilvie .... i Ottawa Power .... Ont. Steel Products Penmans .... Price Bros. .... .... Quebec Power .... Spanish River Com. Spanish River Pfd. Smelters .... ' Shawinigan Steel of Canada .... Twin City .... Winnipeg Canadian Battle Honors. Ottawa, May 11.--The matter of awarding battle honors to Canadian active militia to be carried on their colors for taking part in the Great War and other campaigns, is still under consideration by the Depart- ment of National Defence, it was stated in the House of Commons yes- terday in answer to a question. Search has revealed no trace of 8. Boner, lunatic who escaped from county jail at Orangeville one week ago. Baroness Clifton, British peeress, was galled to the bar at Lingoln's Inn four days after her 26th birth- day. Only child of Alfred Lloyd, aged 4, was drowned in a cistern while visiting at 8t. Mary's Ont. PLANS FOR TOURIST CAMP GIVEN SETBACK It is now just a question whether or not Kingston will have a tourist camp at Lake Ontario Park this summer, The local Tourist Association made arrangements to have the camp at Lake Ontario Park this year, and Just' recently the City Council grant- ed the sum of $2,000 towards puit- ing the park-in readiness for the tourists, It was learned on Tuesday, that there is a hiteh in the negotiations for the fitting out of the camp, and that members of the local assoola- tion have been looking elsewhere for a site. However, nothing definite has been d ed on in regard to the matter, although a meeting of the local association was held on Mon day night, when the matter was un- der discussion but no definite action has been taken. Robbers Qet $3,000 From Dayton, Ohio, Bank Dayton, Ohio., May 11--Six rob. bers held 'up the employees of the First National Bank of Sidney; thirty miles north of here, and escaped with $35,000 telephoned repoits to- day to the police sald. "RADIO BURGLAR" TO DIR In Electric Chair for Killing New York Policeman. New York, May 11.--Paul BE. Hil- ton, known as the "radio burglar," was sentenced yesterday to die in the electric chair for the murder of Patrolman Arthur Kenny, w was shot to death March 25th as he Was attempting to arrest Hilton. Valuable Silk Shipment. Prescott, May 11.---The largest consignment of raw silk to pass through Prescott in many weeks ar« rived here Baturday night and was ferried across the St. Lawrence River en route to New York. The ' shipment, which was from Japan, consisted of nine carloads and was valued at $300,000 per car. Dies of Tetanus. Toronto, May 11.--~Admitted to the. Western Hospital on April 23rd last with an infected hand, Angus Max well, aged thirty-eight, Bancroft, Ont., subsequently developed tetanus and died In hospital last evening. Maxwell was a garageman. Window Was Smashed. Some time during Monday night, a window of the Kingston Tenhias' club house, Upper Ear! street, was broken, but on an investigation be ing made, it was found that nothing in the club house had been disturbed Waterloo, Ont., Presbyterian éon~ gregation has extended an unanis mous call to Rev. W. G. Richardson, Deseronto. Miss Isabella Cowle was fined for smuggling after arriving in Bags land from Paris with two silk dress es In her handbag. Constables Hughes and Spring, of Niagara Falls, Ont, were fired on while chasing a stolen automobile. Berlin Reichstag by 236 votes to 142 rejected bill to seize Hohentols lern estates without compensation. General Bonszani, Italy's secretary for aviation, says Italy will have world's best pursuit planes. NOW IS THE TIME To have those extra Convenience Outlets put in when you are housecleaning We employ only competent men for this work. 'Phone 441 and we will look after it for you. SPECIAL FOR THIS WEEK ! 2 Plate Stoveand Oven ........... $27.00 SEE OUR WINDOW ! The Saunders Electric Co. TELEPHONE 441. After being closed for about six weeks to re-build and re-furnish our Restaurant, we now have everything new, and have a modern Restaurant in every respect. You are invited to visit us, and try the GOOD THINGS WE SERVE, : F ull Course e Dinar 55¢

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