Daily British Whig (1850), 11 Dec 1916, p. 6

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News F rom Exton Ontario Points | of Edmonton, where he is p- 4 NEWS FROM THE DISTRICT q uiet wedding was solemnized It G ihe home of Mr. and Mrs. Der ananoque CLIPPED FROM 1 THE WHIG'S | walker, Perth, on Wednesday when | MANY BRIGHT EXCHANGES. heir daughter, Mary was united in marriage to Norman Miller, son of [ Mrs. Andrew Miller of Bathurst | | [4 The Late Mrs. W. Gavine. After a very shoft illness, Mrs. W, Preparations are being made to Gavine passed away at her residence, | &= flood the curling rink. 5 Frontenac street, on Sunday. The | A Manicure or Toilet Set from| deceased was born sitty-eight years) Best's is always welcome. ago in Leith, Scotland. - She was alE The weather prophets thought on| member of St. Andrew's church. The: Readers of the Whig. from Our Own Carrespond Dee. 11.--Major Howard Tn in Brief Form the Events In The Country About Kingston Are Told | ~Full of Interest to Many, The death of Joseph Galbraith at | Bellamy's occurred on Friday in his | fifty-eighth year. Miss Florence Burtch, of downe, is a patient at the Giemeral Hospital, ill with is, Lieut, J. M. Phelan, who left Belleville, for overseas with the 80th battalion last March has been killed in action, A company recently formed Pembroke, with George Andrews at ita head, is going into the market with a new patent neckyoke ring. Miss Drucilla Gunsolus, Canifton, died Thursday evening after being ill for some months. Deceased was born in 1845 in the township of "r'hurlow. At an early hour Wednesday, Wil- liam Morris passed away at the home | of his niece, Mrs. J. A. Rappell, Ath- ens, Deceased was nearly eighty- five years of age and was born at Eloida. 'W, R. Howson, an old Norwood boy, and formerly on the Sovereign Bank Staff, Havelock, has been elect- ed president of the south Liberal NP NN i A Cure For Bronchitis We Have Been | Selling in Kingston | for Many Years a Remedy We Guarantee. Please read the following letter | and we promise if you buy a bottle of Vinal from us and are the least hit dissatisfied we will cheerfully return | | your money. Woodstock, TI. "TI suffered from bronchitis, had a very bad cough and a pain in my chest, was weak and tirfd all the time, It seemed almost impossible for me to go on with my work. I tried different remedies with- out benefit, also cough medicines, but my druggist recommended Vinol, and it gave me almost instant relief. Its continued use cured my bronchitis and bulit me up so that I feel like a! different man." Charles Botts. The reason that cough syrups fail in such cases is because they are paliative only, while. Vinol removes] the cause, being a constitutional re-| medy in which are combined beet and cad liver peptones, iron and man-| ganese peptonates and glycerophos- | phates. It strengthens and revitalizes | the entire system and assists nature to expel the disease, . Our faith, in, Vinol is shown in the above offer, Mahood's Drug Store, Kingston. | Also at the best druggist in all On- tario towns. : pis ove opi and Lans- Brockville appendiei- | in| On the nineteenth day of | Tenth Moon, in the first year of the Presidency of Yuan Li Hung, and in the year of our Lord 1916, by au- thority of the British Consul Tsinan Fee and by the Rev. Ii Hearne of Wei Hsien and in the na- tive church there, Miss Eve Maude Brownlee, B.A,, Elphin, Ont,, was married to Harold Wilson Harkness, B.Sc. B.A. of the Shantung Christian University staff, Wei Hsien, China BARRIEFIELD VISITORS | News From The Ancient Village Over i The Stream, { Barriefield, Dec, 8,--Mrs. Briggs, Watertown, N.Y.,, also D. H. Mec- Caughuity, Streetsville, guests, of Mrs, Hutton have returned home. Miss Clara Ryan, Winnipeg, is visit- | Ing friends here, Mr. and Mrs. F. { Price and family, Brockville, visiting |at Mr, and Mrs. Leader's have re- | turned home, Miss M. Spurrway, | city, spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. | H, Saunders. The Ladies Auxiliary met at the rectory on Thursday, Dec, 7th, Mr. and Mrs. Salsbury and daughter, Naomi, and aunt, Mrs, Harte, city, | spent Sunday at Mr. and Mrs, Stan- {ton's Sr. Mr. and Mrs. T. Maxam, { efty, also Mrs, G. Sharpe and two [ children spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Turner FINED FoR OFFENCE | Kept Liquor in Place Dwelling. Brockville, Dee. 11.--On day two men hamed Welch and War- ren, both of Bastard, were charged before Magistrate John Pinkerton, Elgin, that within the thirty days Jor past that each did have or keep Other Than or give liquor in a place other than in his private dwelling house in ; Which he resides without first hav- |ing a license so to do under the On- [tario Temperance Act. | The ease arose over a call at a | house in which a couple of women and some children reside, in the township of Kitley. A fing of $200.00 and costs | amounting te about $9.00, in each Site was imposed or three months in goal. MINERAL NEAR MADOC. | Fluorspar Found and Rights Sold to Americans, Relleville, Dec. 11.--Madoc has a new mining company. The latest | saw mi is fluorspar, which has just Héén unearthed outside the town Hniits. A rich deposit has been found on the farms of E. Mcliroy and George Lee. American capitalists have heen interested, and have pur- chased mineral rights on these pro- perties, iy of Kingston 5% Bonds Due 1st July, 1088 Principal and Hal Payable at Denomination £1,000 f Yearly Interest Kingston. Price 98.87 and Interest Yielding 5.10%. Wire at oyr Expense. Wood, Gundy & Compan C anadian Pacific Railway mnllting TORONTO ! Montreal 3 pany. New York the [nephew of Senator George Thurs- | an Taylor, who left here in 1914 as a lieutenant of the 3rd Battery of the 1st Brigade, and has earned his promotion on the at {field and arrived in Canada a week ago on three months leave to recuper- ate from wounds received in action, arrived in town on Friday afternoon. He was met in Montreal by Mrs. Tay- lor, who accompanied him home. Word has been received here that Pte. William Baker, son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Baker, King street, is coming home invalided at an eafly date. Lieut. M. Cook, of Ottawa, son of Mr. and a Edgar Cook, of that city, paid a short visit here with his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. 8. G. Cook, John street, during the past week to say good-bye prior to leaving for overseas service, Rev. Walter Cox, Grand Warden 1.0.0.F.; Clifford Sine, Thomas I. Ellis and William J. Wilson attended the 1.LO.O.F. banquet in Mallorytown on Friday evening. Rev. W. H. Towle, of Lansdowne, occupied the pulpit of Christ church last evening. Miss Florence Taylor, of Brockville, General Hospital, spent Saturday in town with her brother, Major How- ard Taylor. Miss C. M. Wright, teacher of the Eden Grove publie school, spent the week-end in. town with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Wright, Stone street, Miss Ida Pickett and her brother, Roy Pickett, went up to Kingston on Saturday, the latter for the week-end and the former for a two weeks' visit with friends. AA A AeA A pA AAA AA THE STOCK QUOTATIONS, Prices at Which dian Stocks Range. (Special ty the Whig, Toronto, Dec. 11.--FErickson, Per- kins & Co., of New York and Chicago, through their Toronto agent, J. C. Beaty, report the following tions: New York Stocks, American and Cana- i quota-! Monday that snow was near. | survivors are her hushand and two Three classes of Central school had | sons in Toronto, one son, Willlam J., to be dismissed on account of the|and two daughters, Miss Jessie and cold. Miss Mary, in the city, Miss K. Booth, guest of Mrs. C. McLelland, Peterhoro, has returned to Kingston, H. Cunningham, plano tuner. 21 King street. Leave orders at MeAul- ey's Book Store. A new MeKee trio record, "Kil- larney" and "Kathleen Mavourneen,' at Lindsay's, 90c. Nicholas P. Thoune died in Monag- The Late Mrs. M/ Smith. Death called away on Saturday at | her Toronto home, Clara Mabel Sar- ment engineer, of Toronto. The de- ceased was horn in the city about twenty-four years Ago, and left here last year with her husband to reside in Toronto. Sh¢ was the daughter han township on Thursday. His son of the late F. R. Sargent and Mrs. James resides in Kingston. Sargent, 28 Frontenac street, city. Mrs. Wilde was removed in James| The remains arrived in the elty at Reid's motor. ambulance irom 30/ noon. Deceased was, while here, a Montreal street to the Hotel Dieu. faithful member of St. Jame's Xmas ecandy--Red Cross drug|chureh. store, There are left to mourn her loss, Miss Emma Cooke, organist in the! besides her husband, her mother, one Methodist church for some time, has! sister, Bessie, and six brothers, Hu- now hee' appointed choir leader. bert G., T. T., George C., and H. Be The Collegiate Institute and tbe in the city Dr. Frank R., at Syde public schools will close on Friday,| ham, and Capt. W. V. Sargent, Peta. Dec. 22nd, and will re-cpen on Wed-| wawa. ne day, Jan, 3rd. John McCarey, Jr., Joyceville, was | brought to the Hotel Dieu on Sunday night in M. P. Keyes' ambulance. He| is seriously fll, when Joseph, the fourteen-year-old The clvic committees hold i of Mr. and Mrs, George Xe. last meetings of the vear this weék.| Garvey, Cloyne, passed away. The City Council's final session willl deceased took ill a few days ago . be next Monday evening. {an operation for appendieitis being} Now [3 the time to have your pianos found necessary, he was rushed to tuned. Our expert tuners are at your: the hospital here, arriving Sunday service. 'Phone 1544, C. W. Lind-| night, hut the lad failed to rally. say, Limited, 121 Princess street. | Kingston's record, so far as the po-| Ivory Goods lice were concerned, was very good| Never more popular than this sea- over the week-end. 'There was not| Son in pieces or sets, at Best's. one drunk gathered in. A week ago Reta remy the prisoners' dock was filled with] Students may leave their Xmas tipplers. | candy orders now at the Red Cross Dreaming of Home and Motber. | drug store, New Victor record by Fvan Williams, | delivered when wanted, at Lindsay's. Robert Kerr, 69 Madison avenue, The president of the Board of | Toronto, a former passenger traffie Trade acknowledges ontribution of | manager of the C.P.R., died Saturday $25 from thé Ladie Ald Society of | at the age of seventy years, The Late Joseph McGarvey. A sad death happened at the Gen- eral Hospital on Monday morning, Open. 2.30 p.m. Atchison .. . . bin Baltimore & Ohio By Erie :. vf New York Central ce 107 Reading .. .. ... .. Union Pacifie .. .. Car Foundry Locomotive . . Anaconda .. .. .. Republic Steel .. U, 8. Steel .. .. Airbrake .. .. Bethelem . . CP. R, ~ Inter. Nickel .o 37% 106% 109% 1453% 626 ix Canadian Stocks. Steamers . . Cees MY General Electric Dominion Steel Cement .. . ae Steel of Canada rs N. 8. Steel N.S. Car .. Smeliers .. % 120% 9% 72% 87 a Front of Two Hundred Miles. (Special to the Whig.) London, Dec. 11,--Successful Bri- tish operations in German Bast Afri- ca, by which the British line of in- vestment was advanced sixty wiles along a front of 200 miles, are de- scribed in Reuter's despatch from Nirggoro. Seven white officers, forty-seven white soldiers and 240 native soldiers was captured, also a howitzer and and three maxim guns. "Leather Goods » ling roll. Big assortment at Best's. Xmas Candy--Red Cross store, Ar On Behalf of the Underwriters We Offer 125,000 Shares AT 40c PER SHARE 23% payable on subscription--RBalance on delivery of certificates, Subscriptions will be received until Noon of 'December 11th, 1916. THOMPSOI FATT Capital, $2,500,000 q This is 6 i 'the last day a er oe be received at the above q Bee. tock will forthwith 'be listed on the New York i Mining under pany Ontario Companies Act) 'Issued, $1,500,000 ive market will be 1241 41 : Red Cross drag So 1 NCE MADE BY BRITISH In German East Africa Along From the tiny card case to travel- DOW @t'the front; drug 'seas Club: "Thanks for the tobaceo Ji or the friends to supplement the ra- the Battersea Methodist chureh, via HAD BOILS Mrs. W. H. Ormsbee, for the Belgian For Six Months Relief Fund. It hag been decided that "Indian B.B.E. DROVE THEM AWAY. Days" will be produced shortly and the funds gives ¥n aid of the Blue Cross Society toypurchase horse am-| bulances for the front. The date has| not been settled. Toilet wateré--Reéd Cross store. There was a very short session of the Police Court on Monday morning, A case in which a sordier has been on remand, charged with an infraction of the ard Bo uhrange Act, was further Shp otntes at the dru Tn % When the blood becomes impure the very first symptoms which mani- fest themselyes are a breaking out of various forms of skin trouble such as boils, pimples, sores, etc., and to get rid, of these troubles you mugt cleanse fhe blood thoroughly with a good blood remedy. The best blood cleansing remedy on the market to-day is Burdock Blood Bitters, Thousands of people from one end of Canada to the other have used it during the past forty years, and have nothing but words of prais cleansing properties. Mr. Rufus Beers, Upper Main River, N.B., writes: "I want to say a few words about your medicine, Burdock Blood Bitters, I had boils for over six months and sometimes was so bad I could pot work. I tried lots of cures but nothing would drive them away for good until I took B.B.B. In a short time I was all better. It is a dandy medicine. IJ keep it in the house all the time," Burdock Blood Bitters is manu- factured only by The T. Milburn Co., + Fresh i Capt. W. L. Grant as writtén from overseas to the Kingston St. An- drew's: Society thanking the mem- bers tor their had Christmas gif. He is AoE nicely. Every member of the society overseas lias been réniembered with a gift. { During. the offgrtory at St, Luke's church on Sunddy evening the choir rendered the gn hem, "Conquering Kings Their Tit%é& "Fake," in a most creditable mannef. The solos were ably taken by Miss Kathleen Wilson and George Graves, Page & Shaw--The candy of ex- cellence--at the Red Cross Drug store, The students are busy preparing for {their Christmas holidays. Queen's { University closes on Dec. 20th, and will re-open on January 3rd, while| Limited, Toronto, Ont., but so well the cadets of the R.M.C. will have, and favorably is it known that there ji from Dec. 15th to Jan. 6th to enjoy | are many imitations on the market. |! themselves, The Bishop of Kingston will con-, wrapper,' duet services 'of fntercess! in the, ~~ Cathedral at 8 p.m, from Monday to! Friday inclusive with addresses on| Questions _connested with the war, To-night the subjeet will be "Why A 3 ) Does God 'Allow War?" E. Sheppard, 34 Union street west, | Twelve Dollar Gold Wrist Watch as written Post- | master Stewart as follows, follawing ; the recéips of tobaceo from the Over- received, We. appreciate it very imuch. Glad, that Kingston has not | forgotten the boys." | | GIFTS FOR WAR PRISONERS Beginning to Arrive--Parcels Ad- dressed to Prisoners' League. Christmas boxes are beginning to bone for the German prisoners of war at Fort Henry, They come from places near and remote, one arriving recently from Shanghai, China. A number of the parcels, principally those containing | islons, are ad- dressed to the Welfare League, which the prisoners formed some time ago, and I hen distributes the goods he members. The eatables, ||! Ane rw largely German in naturel} fl including that odorless dainty, lim- I; burger, are ordered by the prisoners As a gift that will | please, to say noth- | ing of its usefulness, we cannot suggest a better Xmas present for a lady. This is a 15-jewel movement, in-a fine gold-filled case with an expansion brace- let. The price $12.00 includes the engrav- ing and fancy box, tions received at the fort. These ra: tions are plentiful and excellent, but, |}! as is yen known, the German is some |} Canadian Casual Casualties. Killed in wetion---J. K. MacDon- nell, Alexandria, Believed killed--~W. W. Bateson. ff 10 Camphetifond, re uly HW. M.: Harnbeck, nA: x 71. plajus: 8. 8. Me- | I| lary, rek Ylle; Dutican v: McDonald, Other Wrist Watehis ofl ar 2) D. A. MeMil- Jrvingion; H Watkla, Belle 11 for its|s gE See that our name appears om thejs gent, wife of Melville Smith, Govern-| == They will he mailed or = The old question of what to give is splendidly solved if you visit this store. Evening Slippers, Dress Shoes, Hoc- key Boots, Moccasins, Overgaiters, Felt Shippers, Overshoes and Numerous other useful presents that will surely please you. A PN A EAN NA i ~~ |.H. Sutherland &Bro. The Home of Good Shoes. GLOVES FOR MEN 50¢ TO $3.00 NEWEST NECKWEAR 25¢ TO $1.00 FINE SHIRTS and PYJAMAS $1.00 TO $5.00. LOUNGING ROBES $4.50 TO $12.00 SWEATERS FOR MEN $1 .00 TO $10.00 HOUSE COATS UP TO $12.50 Roney's PRINCESS STREET. EAA The Cost "DY: of glasses should be judged by the value of good eyesight and satisfaction, NOT by the few dollars difference between the cheaper glasses and the best. We advise the best you can get in glasses, but we have glasses that will mest your pocketbook from $2.50 upwards. J. J. STEWART, Opt.D. Cor. Wellington & Clarence Sts, Optician and Optometrist. Opp. Post Office Phone 600 Red Mie : ie HUN i ® J f HI There' s surely no better gift wher- ver thefe is a. Vietar or Viewohs. othing more acceptable; noth- "ing more enjoyable. Stop in any time and we'll gladly give you a descriptive list of the newest recordsai I playany numbzrs you wish to hear 3

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