Daily British Whig (1850), 25 Nov 1916, p. 8

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__ PAGE TEN In ernal Bathing's , Rapid Growth' hat a re-| ills} expect and the many hich is so effectual Internal Bathing, make many converis enecral use has increased so in the past few yédars as as > W News From E NEWS FROM THE DISTRICT { astern Ontario s born in the Township of Augusta seven years ago. I'he Pembroke Observer says Hon. Wm, Martin, the new premier wa sixty i icioug and | OLIPPED FROM THE WHIG'S of Saskatchewan (then "Bflly" Mar- ver presen 1 And %mne clear-headed, | eager for the Mr. F Smitt ites Dear Doctor Your 'Cascade' made a new man of me at the age of 49% | persuaded my wife to use the treatment also, hag better health than ce of 1€ 'Casend 1 tn » Faint. ing f the » CRY of fare and dr 101 tAKY cold nk all be when exposed; ho does not cause oppression I. B. I. Cascade" the m cient device for Internal Bathing being shown and explained dn 4 F. J. Hoag, Kingston Ask f booklet, "Why Man of Today is On! Per Cent. Efficient." If you prefer to Dr. Chas A. Tyrrell 163 C« street, Toronto, for same. aa Who's Your Grocer? We're After Your Trade. Have you tried dealing here? Call and let us fill your next order. If you want good, fresh groceries, of the best quality, appetizihg cooked and smoked meats, from a clean, tidy store. Thompson's Grocery 294 Princess St. Phone 387 DON'T WEAR A TRUSS! After Thirty Years' Experience 1 Have Produced An Appliance for Men, Women or Children That Cures Rupture. § Send It en Trial, If you have tried most everything else, come to me. Where others fail is where [| have my greatest success. Send attached coupon today and I wil) send The above is C. BE. Brooks, inventor of the Applinnce, who cured himself and whe in new giving others the bene. fit of his experience, If tared write him hi at Marshall, you free my illustrated book on Rup- ture and its cure, showing my Appli- ance and giving you prices and names of many people whe have tried dt and were cured. It gives instant relief when all others fall. Remember, | use no salves, no harness, no tles, 1 send on {rial to prove what I say is true. You are the judge, and once having seen my illustrated book and read itiyou will be as enthusiastic as my hundreds of patients whose letters you can also read. Fill out free cous pon below and mall today. It's well wicrth your time whether you try my Appliance or not. " FREE INFORMATION COUPON Mr. C, E. Brooks, S53A State St, Marshall, Mich. 'Please send me by mail, in plain wrapper, your fHustrated book and full information about your Appl. ance for the cure of rupture. Name Address rit lege MANY BRIGHT EXCHANGES. in Brief Form the Events Im The Country About Kingston Are Told ~--g'ull of Interest to Many. Peterboro Council has discovered it cannot exempt returned soldiers from the poll tax. Wilfrid White, Prescott, recently wounded, writedito a friend that he has received a military medal. On Monday death robbed Renfrew of one of its prominent ladies in the person of Mrs. Samuel Forrest. | Rev, A. H. Scott, Perth, and Walt-| ler T. Ross, Picton, were elected] Society. The death occurred in Prescott | Friday morning of John McLean, a {well-known cheese manufacturer of | Augusta | Mervin Holmes, Brockville, was run down by an auto while riding jon a bicycle, sustaining a broken leg and a bad cut on the head. The death occurred on Sunday in {the Victoria Hospital, Renfrew, of William D. Wilson, Calabogie. The funeral was held on Tuesday. On Friday Rev. W. A. Hamilton united in marriage Miss May Fergu- son, Elizabethtown, to Lester L. i Robinson, Carthage, N.Y. Miss Anna M. Dewar, Brockville, has graduated as a nurse at the [training school! of the House of the {Good Samaritan, Watertown, N.Y, | Pte. Alex. Sloan, of the Bank of | Toronto, was killed in action. He | left Peterboro branch a few months ago to enlist in the Canadian Engi- neers. { William LaFrance, son of Mr. and| | Mrs. Joseph LaFrance, Gananoque,| {left on Thursday for Sudbury, where | | he purposes spending the next few | months, Capt. J. H. Burnham, M.P., Peter- boro, under the impression that a| move is on foot to entertain the sol-| diers' wives and families, has sub-| scribed $50. | { Lieut. H. R. Kincaid, Brockville, who left with a draft of officers from the 156th Battalion last sumnter, is| now in France attached to the 21st| Battalion. Dr. W. E. Wilkins, Harrowsmith, | has leased the residence formerly oc-| cupied by Mrs, A. Breaugh, Deseron- to, for a number of years. Dr. Wil-| kins will open a surgery. | At Tabernacle Methodist parson-| age, Belleville, on Nov. 23rd, by Rev. | 8. C. Moore, Lillian May Flunder and Wilford Joseph Burshaw, both of Belleville, were married. W. C. McCarney, of the Provincial Hotel, Gananoque, recently under- went an operation at the 8t. Vincent de Paul Hospital, Brockville, where he is still undergoing treatment. Dr. M. J. O'Rielly, Calabogie, whose marriage to Miss Katie Sun- strum, took place at Golden Lake on Tuesday, is expected home with his bride on Friday. In St. Paul's church, Brockville, on Wednesday, the marriage took place of Miss Margaret Christena Gibbins, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Gibbins to Robert Milton Elliott, of Ottawa. The marriage was solemnized at Memphis, Tenn., on Thursday of Dr. Fred P. Robertson, youngest son of the late James Robertson, Brockville, and Miss Minnie Ruhberg, a young lady of Memphis. The death took place on Friday of John Towe, Brockville, a native of the Township of Yonge, in his fifty- seventh year. Deceased was a son of the late Mr. and Mrs, Matthew Towe, of Mallorytown. Miss Lillian Wallbridge and Fred. Morton were married last Tuesday, Miss Wallbridge is one of the most popular young ladies of Mountain View. The best wishes of everyone goes with her to her new home at Melville, At an early hour on Tuesday Saml. Davidson, Prescott, passed away, fol- lowing an illness extending from March last. He was the second son of John and Elizabeth Davidson, and TTA E Cozy There is cozy comfort if you have a pair of felt slippers for the long winter ev- Women's Felt Slippers $1.00, $1.2 .. $1.25, $1.5 Men's Felt Children's F Pas | took place on Nov. tin of the House of Commons), stood at Wilno poll in the memorable Graham-Maloney bye-election in South Renfrew a few gears ago. Word was received at Almonte of | ther death of Mrs. Walter Scrimgeour Christena McKenzie), which 2nd at Sher- brooke, Que. Mrs. Scrimgeour was for some years a well-known and re; spected citizen of Appleton. Mrs. J. C. McDonald, New Jersfy, with her little daughter, Elizabgth, are spending a few days in Carle- ton Place with Mrs. McDonald's mother, Mrs, Mrs. George Edwards. Mr. Mr. McDonald has received a (nee 50 |direetors of the Ontario Horticultural| Position in the copper mines at Cop- per Cliff and is moving his family there, making a visit en route. The death occurred on Tuesday at the Victoria Hospital of one of Ren- frew"s old and esteemed citizens in the person of John Dunbar. Mr. Dunbar, in his sixtyfifth year, was taken to the hospital last week and was operated on for tumor in the side, Martin Slate, fireman on the Can- adian government steamer Grenville, is a patient at the Brockville Gen- eral Hospital suffering from painful injuries to his head and back caused through falling intosthe hold of the vessel a few days ago. His home is at Rockport. The death occurred at Ottawa on Wednesday of Miss Alice Mitchell, a former very popular young lady of Lansdowne. She was taken ill on Sunday of spinal meningitis. She was in the early 20's and was a daughter of Mrs. Emma Mitchell, residing on the main road east of Lansdowne, | Gananoque | (From Our Own Correspondent) Nov, 25.,--Under the auspices of the Maple Leaf Girls' Bible Class of Grace Sunday school tea was served from 3.30 to 6 p.m. on Thursday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Conner, King street. The proceeds | were in aid of the Sunday school mis- sionary fund. Miss Elizabeth Shine, nurse-in- training at the hospital of The Good Shepherd on Long Island, who was recently reported as missing, has been located. She stopped for a visit with some young lady friends and overstayed her leave for a few days, but has since reported for duty. The affair was the cause of much uneasiness and worry to her mother. The Young People's Society of Grace church entertained the fathers and mothers of the congregation in the lecture-room of that church last evening. A fine- programme was furnished and a good time enjoyed by a fair attendance. Refreshments were served at the close. Hon. Sena- tor George Taylor occupied the chair. Capt. Reiffenstein, who spent the winter here a year ago with "A" Company, 59th Battalion, and was one of the popular officers of the regiment, has been wounded in ac- tion. Arthur Nelson, Charles street, was in receipt of a telegram from the Militia Department at Ottawa yester- day, giving information that his brother, Herbert Nelson, who, left here with the 80th Battalion, had been recently wounded in action, re- ceiving a gunshot wound in his leg. RENFREW WILL TEACH FRENCH Think It Will Help Soldiers When in Flanders. Renfrew, Nov. 26--Renfrew Board of Education is making arrange- ments for night industrial classes on a much larger scale than before, be- cause of increasing public interest. There are to classes in millinery, dressmaking, mbchanical drawing, mathematics, correspondence, art, and business English. If the Education Department will sanction it, the subjects will include physical culture, to be taught to men and women in the Collegiate Insti- tute gymnasium. Conversational French is also proposed, this to be particularly for the officers and men of the 240th Battalion, whose head- quarters are in Renfrew, and who are expected to find a working knowledge of French very serviceable when reaching Flanders. H. W. Bryan, M.A, principal of the Collegiate Institute, will have charge of the classes, with a staff of six or seven teachers. RIDES ON WOUNDED DEER. Lindsay Hunter Has Wild Trip in < Woods. Lindsay, Nov. 24.--A party of deer hunters fram the vicinity of Burnt river has returned home with their full allowance of deer, and tell res bask win hang uc n He fired, don il 7 - rire d BORN... CHRISTIE--At Hamilton, Nov. ----MT. 7 20th, to and--Mrs A -C-Christie; a son: FRETTS--At Napanee, on Nov. 22nd, to Mr. and Mrs. 'Harry Fretts, twin girls HUFFMAN--At Tamworth, on Nov. 13th, to Ms. and Mrs. J. E. Huff. man, a san. WEBSTER---In Wellington, Nov. 14th, to Mr. and Webster, a daughter. MARRIED MORTON--WALLBRIDGE--At vill Nov. 14th, = Miss Ww , Huff's Island, to Morton, Melville GORDON-VANDUSEN---At Picton on »iDcr 18th, Mrs. Ada M. Vandusen, and G. Edward Gordon, Cressy DIED | KETTLE--At Napanee, on Nov. 21st, "harles J. Kettle, aged 45 years, HUDTCHINSON---{In Sophiasburg on Nov, ' 16th, Henry Hutchinson. AMacDONALD--in Picton, on Nov. 15th, J Nettie Jane Brown, wite of Henry MacDonald, aged 39 years. KETCHUP TIME. Excellent Ways to Season Your Winter Meals. Ont, on Mra. H Belle- Lilke Fred A GOOD MUSHROOM RECIPE. Tested Ways of Preserving the Succu- lent Tomato, to Say Nothing of Three Other Savory Relishes For Meat Dishes and Boston Baked Beans. Ketchup time is here, and it be- hooves the good housewife to "put up" some of this appetizer. For tomato ketchup take half a peck of sound, ripe tomatoes and wipe them well, quarter them, place on dishes and scatter with a half pound of salt. Leave for twen- ty-four hours, drain the juice through a hair sieve into a pan. Add two dozen small capsicums and ten shal lots, or, if not at hand, two ounces of whole pepper and four tablespoonfuls of onion juice. Simmer for half an hour and then add the tomato, which has been pulped through a fine bair sieve, ' Cook for thirty minutes more. tle, cork and seal. Take half a large sieveful of green walnut shells and place them in a wooden tub with a half pound of coarse salt. Beat and mash them from time to time for six days. Tie up and drain the juice into a pan and continue to mash the shells until all juice is extracted. Strain the liguid into a pre- serving pan and simmer and skim thor- oughly; then add two ounces of bruised ginger, two ounces of allspice, a half ounce of whole pepper, a half ounce of cloves and simmer all gently together for about one hour. Measure out about an egual guantity of spice into each bottle, then fll with the liquid, cork, seal thoroughly and keep until the fol- lowing year. To one peck of good, sound, fresh mushrooms allow a bait pound of coarse salt. Break up and let them stand three hours, and tBen mash them once or twice a day for two days. Pour the mash into a stone jar and add for each quart one ounce of whole pep- per. Place & weighted plate on the jar and stand the jar in a pan of hot water, Bring it to a boil and boil for quite two hours, Strain off the juice and simmer it for thirty minutes. Let it stand, and next day add a table spoonful of brandy to each pint and again let it stand in a cool place for twenty-four hours. Strain ft {into small bottles, and be careful not to disturb the dregs. Then cork and seal. c-- SHOOTS HIS LITTLE SISTER. Playing With Rifle Which He Did Not Know Was Loaded. Cobourg, Nov, 24, --Yesterday morning Jack McLaughlin, a boy about ten years of age, residing on Fourth street, accidentally shot his sister, Mary, while playing with a .22 rifle that he did not know was load- ed. Drs. Lapp and Harrison attend- ed her, and had her removed to the hospital. The bullet struck her on the tip of the nose, went into the lip and through the roof of the mouth, smashing the bone there. It went through the tongue, tearing a hole in it an inch wide, and then into the throat or neck, where is lodged. The little girl is in a rather serious con- dition, and so far the doctors are un- able to. locate the bullet. Canadian Casualties. Wounded--W, Aris, Prescott; E. J. Cummings, Almonte; A. Izzard, Frankford; Capt. T. H. Abell, Co- bourg; A. Caldwell, Caldwell's Mills; I. M. Conley, A. Hurst, A. Smellie, Kingston, Capt, W. R. McGee, Pem- broke; F. G, Osborne, Iroquois; S. E. Armstrong, Peterboro; James Miller, R. B. Morden, Belleville. ¢ A --------------------------------. ¢ Stopped The Advance. "{Specini t5 thé Whig.) Nov. 25.--Landing of Bot- THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1916. INCIDENTS OF THE DAY a LOCAL NOT®S AND FTTEMS OF Travel on the Grand Trunk Rail-{ way these days is splendid. | The rush of mail for overseas keeps up at the post office, There was no session of the police court on Saturday morning. Just a month till Christmas now. Shop early, say the storekeepers. Prof. Adam Shortt, C.M.G., was fifty-seven years old on Friday. Lieut.-Col. (Mgr.) Burke, of To- ronto, was in Kingston on Saturday. Strictly fresh Page & Shaw and Huylér's chocolates at the Red Cross drug store. St. Andrew's church tea and sale, Thursday, Nov. 30th." St. Andrew's Hall, . On November 30th the locks on the Rideau Canal will be ¢losed for the season. Larkspur Lotion kills all kinds of vermin. 25c a bottle. Red Cross drug store. Miss Mary Cochrane, Yonge Mills, is spending a few weeks with friends in Kingston. J General was the sorrow expressed by citizens to-day aver the death of John S. Smith, St. George's Girls' Auxiliary sale and tea, St. George's Hall, Wednes- day, Nov. 29th, 3 to 6 p.m. Publicity, a Montreal publication, speaks of the Whig as "An up-to-date paper in every respect." Pineapples, Grape Fruit, Parson Brown Oranges, Egg Plant, etc., from Florida, at Carnovsky's. Page. & Shaw--the candy of ex- cellence--at the Red Cross durg store. The cold spell brought a number of rush orders to men on Saturday morning. The thermometer dropped Friday night to 14.4 degrees above zero, the lowest point reached this fall. It is current report in many parts of Ontario that W. F. Nickle, M.P,, will be the Minister of Labor before|S many days. Hear record number 64599, "Then You'll Remember Me." by John Me- Cormack, at C. W. Lindsay, Limited, 121 Princess street. Arrangements are being made to hold a prayer meeting at noon on Mondays in the Y.W.C.A. during the period of the war, Frederick and William Smith, Napanee, are brothers of the late J. 8S. Smith. They were greatly sad- dened by the demise, Now is the time to buy your Vie- trola for Christmas. All styles at Lindsay's. ' One of the leading Kingston hotels recefifly advanced its rates, the minimum charge now being $3 a day instead of $2.50. The Bay of Quinte Press Associa- tion met in Napanee on Friday. Pre- sident Elliott, of the Canadian Press Association, attended. Huyler"s high-class candy at the Red Cross drug store. 8t. Andrew's Society has forward- ed a letter to various societies, draw- ing attention to the need of recruits for the 253rd Kilties Battalion. Larkspur Lotion kills all kinds of vermin. 25c a bottle at the Red Cross drug store. Miss Madeline Wendling, daughter of Mr, and Mrs. Michael Wendling, Brockville, will. énter Hotel Dieu, Kingston, as a nurse-in-traiming. The Military Y. M. C. A. has re- ceived further contributions of bobks to the circulating library from Mrs. R. V. Rogers and Mrs. G Chown. Red Cross Cough Syrup. 26c a|= bottle at the Red Cross drug store. H. 8. Folger, Deputy American Consul, made an inspection of Fort Henry in the absence of Mr. John- son. He found conditions satisfac- tory. ' | large the coal \ \ Saturday Specials Crepe Collars, regular 50c value . . . . Organdie collars and lace Newest lace, organdie and crepe collars,, regular $1.00 for . . .. See Handkerchief Specials. Children's white bear and corduroy coats cis v1 $849 Camasols,just arrived, a beautiful line for onsaleat .. . ... . Big Blouse Specials for This Evening. Now is the time for Christmas Gift Buying. Night MENDELS Opp. (Grand Opera House 217 Princess St. 'REAL Made to Measure Service-- VALUES INFIVE IMPORTED FABRICS-- TAILORED TO YOUR, INDIVIDUAL MEASUREMENTS -- | il AAA A oney s PRINCESS STREET. Over two hundred parcels for prisoners of war in Germany, sent through the office of United States Consul Johnson, left the local post office this week. Penslar Sore Throat Cure sold at the Red Crosssdrug store. The Children's Aid Society is to se- cure good foster homes for as many of its children as possible. This will relieve the expense on:the city for maintenance. A. Shaw addressed the Collegiate Institute Club on Friday evening on| "Business Life After College." G. Kirkpatrick presided and there was a large attendance. Hear record number T4483, "Lucia," by Giovanni Martinelli, at C. W. Lindsay, Limited, 121 Princess street. At Brockville on Thursday even- ing the Knights of Columbus pre- sented Lucien Nourry, now organist of St. Mary's Cathedral, Kingston, with a leather travelling case. Blaud's Improved Iron Pills. 26¢ at the Red Cross drug store. On y evening Lieut.-Col. Hunter received word that a harm- less lunatic was at large at Glen- burnie, and he advised that the man be taken in charge as a vagrant and sent to jail for a few days that he might be examined as to his san Feintzman & do. Art Piano is not an ordinary piano. It has taken 65 years of unceasing effort and experimenting to bring it to its present state of perfection and to win for it "World's Best Piano" he title T-- AY [2 x AON 4 A ER LJ

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