PAGE EIGHT 3 Founded 1847. The Young Man's Suit This yuong man is just blooming into manhood and he looks to us for his clothes. We know the young man's clothes require- ments and we see that he Bas what he ought tohave. We've new patterns and colorings in suitings smartly cut and tailored. Coats just the cor- rect length and cut to fit the form; soft wide roll, narrow trousers with cuffs. The limit of smart style. $12, $13.50, $15, $18 and $20. It's never a bit of trouble to show young men the sort of gar- ments we have for o-- them. We always deem it a great pleasure to do so. Livingst on's, L A Little Out of the Wey, But It Will Pay 3 You To Walk. | Suits and oats All the Seagon's Newest Styles in the accepted fabrics and colors. Smart original creations display- ing faultless tailoring and excep- Spring ded = COATS FROM hn A A AN MN ANNI THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 22.1917. WAS MARR D TO Was Performed at Figs Baptist Church Parsonage ! Laing--(Couple Ceremony Douglas Serenad ed by Salvation The Army Band. place marriage took f Miss Emma Ge nesday 1 i mony was performed at the parson 'her sister, Mis the groam was | W. Newman Following the ceremony, the bri i dal party drove to the home | groom at 464 Princess street, | a supper was served. The gue SYS i in cluded the immediate relatives of the | bride and groom, supported by Ald..H | dered the best wishes to Mr. and Mrs { Graham. The bride was the recipi- | ent of a beautiful collection of gifts | Both Mr. and Mrs. Graham are ac- tive workers in the Salvation Army, and during the evening the members of the Army band serenaded Mr, and Mrs, Graham at their home. The many friends of the bride and groom throughout Kingston and dis- trict will extend congratulations, The groom's gift to tue bride to the brides- 13 sunburst of pearls; flaid a crescent gold brooch peatls, mond pin Corcoran-Lynch Nuptials, St. Brendan's church, Rockport, was the scene. of a quiet but pretty wedding on Monday last, Father Cullinane Miss Mary Lynch, of the late Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Lynch, to Mr. H. Corcoran, of Kingston. The bride was attired in her travelling suit. and was assisted by her sister, Mrs, Leo Greaudeau. The groom was supported by Augustine Lynch, brother of the bride. Aftér the cere- mony and a nuptial mass, the bridal party were driven to the home of the bride's brother, Augustine second daughter after which the young couple left for their home in Kingston. PERMANENT HIGHWAY IS NOW SUGGESTED} Militia Engineers Working on Plans for Rgad to Barrie- field Camp. The Militia Department {to build a permanent highway proposes be- lepartment, Provincial Government, County of Frontenac - and City of Kingston, There is two miles and a quarter of road, and if as planned a road twenty-four feet wide is con- structed, there wiil be a total of ever 35,000 syuare yards. There are two plans under con- sideration. One is to have the road built of macadam with a tarred sur- face. This will cost some $60,000, would take about eight weeks to build, and would have a grade of well over seven per cent. The other is to have the cut through Barrie- field hill completed---about 45,000 | cubic yards of limestone---and having a road of less than four per cent. grade laid out. This road would be absolutely permanent. being of con- crete all the wayv.. The cost would be $120,000. This would take six months to build. Both of these costs would be re-| duced greatly if the finished surface! of the road is made eighteen ~instead | The. engineering' demartment is making efforts to fave the proposal brought to a sueecessful issue so that it can be completel this year. CHARGE AGAINST GIRL FALLS, Her Sister Will Appear for July Assizes. Peterboro, Feb. 22. Last evening the jury in the Supreme Court, over which Justice Sutherland presided, returned a verdict of not guilty in the case of Annie Douglas, Westwood, who was charged with having mur- dered her infant child. Her sister, Alice Douglas, again:t whem the grand jury returned a true bill on the charge that the girl disposed of the body with the intention of con- cealing birth of the child, was liber- ated on bail of $4,000, to appear at the next court. | On July 4th, 1918, Annie Douglas give birth to a child which died the following day. Odor bf turpentine was detected on the body by the nurse, who notified a doctor, but no action was taken at that time. Later when Inspector Miller, of Toronto, was making investigations in Aspho-| del Township, he found the bedy of rial in the Douglas child buried in an out-[ the city to prepare them for vege- heuse and, following an inquest, the twd young women were arrested. | FOOD RIOTING. . Philadelphia The Scene of Some Lawlessness, {Snenia] to the Whis Philadelphia, Feb. pel riot- ing broke out in Philadelphia this af- | ternoon. Shouting "It's robbery. robbery," several hundred Jewish ar Savings Certificates in Demand =1300 laud Detly. WOLFE IS- oe LAND LADY WI DSESDAY NIGHT. EXMAYOR GRAHAM sy MLITARY CIRCLES by Rev. on Wed- rtrude Walker, daughter of Edwin J. Walk- ter, Wolre Island, and Ex-May i Christopher J. Graham The ,cere- {age of the F Baptist Chureh at {6 0"¢lock, Rev. Douglas Laing offic ating. e bride--was attended by Mabel Walker, while of the where It delivered | pytrery is | Ald. Newman and Ensign Smith, | of the Salvation Army, { happy speeches, in which they ten was | with | and to the groomsman a dia-| when Rev, | united in marriage | Lynch, | where a dainty luncheon was served | tween the end of the causeway and the Barriefield camp, and sug 58 hat the cost be borne in part by the| 1 $ THEATRICAL NEWS. ey: ae pr .q a ---- t] A week igo the » hig published! Wilson in "My Killarndy - Rose." J ihe faci that 235th sh B tev Ba i My Killarney Rose' is the title 1lion was moving to Ottawa a of a new Irish song-play ritten by =lover the quarters vacated recen the 207th Battalion, The officia jouncement was m y Wednesday, or just a week information was e people through the first Whig Sergt. W I. Goodchild and Pte. H. G ave returned from Montreal, they were recruiting for Queen's University -Highlanders { It has again been brought to tite] attention of this office that compli- not being paid to officers) infringement of his order will be severely dealt with, 253rd Queen's Waiver-| nents are on the streets, Any Orders of |sity*Highlanders. That the proving popular » Civil "Servants is shown by llowing recent enlistments at tawa: W. C. Bethune, Interior; Nor- man Talcott, Interior; R. A. Farrow, Customs; Oliver Shaw, Defence; Joe Messinger, Defence; Charles H. Bland, Civil Ser- vice Commission; William Militia and Defence; S. J. Plunkett, Militia and Defence; James Connoily, External Affairs; {ham, External Affairs; Fletcher Bradley, Customs; N. Fagan, Post Office. = The 72nd Battery iy posed largely of Civil Servants, pro- fessional and university men. Miss Monie Milburn, Belleville, is in Kingston to attend the Military | School of Nurses, having attained | her appointment tor overseas. The 253rd Battalion is gradually] assuming shape here with the vari- | qus detachments arriving in the city. So far the physique of the men. is higher in standard that any {ion that has been raised, and when | | mobilization is completed Lieut.-Col. P. G. C. Campbell shouid have one! of the best units in the countfy |: Sight men from Vancouver arrived on Wednesday. Pipe-Major Alex- iander Dair, of Ottawa, brought thirty men 'in the city on Wednes- day. This number includes four oth- jer trained pipers and the men who | will be used in making the 253rd| | Queen's University Highland band of | pipers. There are now 378 men in the 53rd Q. U. H. Battalion. i Lieut.-Col. P. @Q. C. Campbell was able to be on duty en Thursday after an illness. T. J. Shaw, ...424 Lower Rideau street, who has been working at the | Locomotive works, has enlisted in the-253rd Q. U. H. Major F. B. Eatqn, the lately ap- pointed A. D. of Supplies and Trans- 'ports, arrived in the city on Thurs- day morning to take over his new duties. He is a returned officer and has had experience at London, Ont., and should be a valuable addition to the headquarters st\'. > Major R. D. Ponton, Instructional Cadre, was at headquarters on Fri- day, having' completed a course at the Toronto School of Musketry. Capt. Grant, quartermaster, 253rd Q. U. H,, Ottawa; was in the city on Thursday to report for duty. =n rig.-Gen, T. D. R. Hemming, G. 0. C., and Lieut.-Col. W. J. Brown, G.8.0., were expected to return from Ottawa this (Thursday) after- noon. available space has been made, This department has an individual record 'of each of 35,000 soldiers, arrive here a few days Sergt.-Major W. J. Barrett, 'W. 0. the 1st Battalion, Canadians. He has had such an extensive experience in military work that his appoint- ment as garrison sergeant-major has been made. Ag0 was Capt. Burnham, M.P., 93rd Bat- talion, Peterboro, has cabled the British War Office an offer to raise a contingent of Canadian girl clerks for France to felive men for the trenches. Capt. Burnham has open- ed lists at his office to receive the names of young women willing to meet the demand for female help. - Would Till Vacant Lots. Montreal, Feb. 22.--Controller Ainey will propose at the next meet- ing of the Board of Control that $1. 800 be voted to plough and harrow the thousands of vacant lots around 'table growing next summer. * ANNOUNCEMENTS. Notices of any character re- lating to future events, where columns at 10c a line for first. O¥ | Wilson, the H/ Pri itchard, Corpl. K.4 Edwards where the 253rd 72nd Queen's University among! the Ob) week in a new Triangle play called Militia and | Militia and | Loftus, | Edward Cunning-! com: | battal-| Company' s production of Owing to pressure of work in the! DAA and QM. G. Department at | of twenty-four feet, | the Armouries a redistribution of the Among the returned soldiers to) asstegated 6,895 tons. of | tioning, the supplies totalled 5,057 singing dialect comedian, in which Mr. Wilson will make his appearance + at the Grand Opera > ouse to-night / in addition to an lINeresting story: of Erin told in a pledsing manner by 'a capable com pany. there are numerous stage set- | tings which lend interest to the. per- formance. The comedy part of the play is fresh, bright and orizinal, thére being several] quaint types of | character that will prove a pleasant diversicn to the spectator, In. ad- dition. to this, the different scenes afford a chance for the introduction of a number of new songs by the | star, These are not "lugged" if, but, on the contrary, fit in naturally as a part of the play, At the Ea Dorothy Dalton will be seen at the Strand for the last three days of this "The Female of the Species.' It | deals with an unusual love tangle in which an unscrupulous woman ob- tains possession of another woman's husband, whén the latter is deprived { of his memory through an accident. | The wife is confronted with a diffi- {cult problem in trying to regain a husband who has no recollection of her. But right finally wins and the siren loses. Miss Dalton is seen in the last named role, and.is said to give an unusual characterization. | Other good reels including a mile of i Keystone fun and frol.c, and Bob Mec- Louglin, an old Kingstonian, in a | high-c ss vaudeville turn, complete a well selected programme. At Griffin's. { The cruel, merciless methods of the "third degree" are relentle | posed fn the most graphic manner in the Jesse L. Lasky Feature Play "The Yel- Tow Pawn," showing at "Griffin's" { to-day, Friday and Saturday, and in which the clever and popular co- | stars, appear: This Paramount picture has to do with the intrigues of a district at- torney, jealous of his wife's infatu- tion for a-young artist, and the | to send an innocent man to the gal- lows. This stirring element of the drama is sweetly contrasted by a tender love story, which Ridgley and Wallace Reid more than iample opportunities for the display of their well-recognized talents, Miss Ridgley, known for her beauty and vivacity, as well as her {splendid dramatic ability, has won for herself a place among the leading photo-dramatic actresses of the coun- try, while Mr. i widely known and able of the young- er generation of stage 'and screen favorites. "The Yellow Pawn" has to do hemian set in New York City, and deals .with the love affair the wife of a district attorney and a {famous painter. "How the artists's Chinese servant | brings about a terrible situation and later rectifies it makes a theme of; absolutely unusual intensity. i We also show on the same b#l| episode six of that great serial, "The| Shielding Shadow," ancther of the| "Musty Suffers" laugh provoking, comedies, with a Mytual Weekly de- | picting events of importance in vari- | ous parts of the world. Our vaude-| ville, "The Barriers," novelty enter-| tainers, are a team of high-class | bicycle and slack wire artists. { Coming: The Miraele of Love. LOYALLY LING UF TO Voluntary Rationing Schemes--W hat | : London Markets Show. . Londen, Feb. 22.--A return from! Capt. A. A. Clark, 139th Battalion, the London Central Markets states Brighton, was at headquarters on)! that the week Lefore the introduc- | Thursday. ition "of thé voluntary Jfationing| -- 'scheme the 'supplies at Smithfield | Last week | {the second week of voluntary. ra-| tons, a decrease of 1,836 tons, ly 27 per cent. "The result, as London is concerned must," the return, "be considered satis-| factory, as it indicated a diminished demand. The principal distributive | centre shows that a large dection of | the populace of the metropolis is loyally restricting the consumption] of meat within the limits laid down! by the food controller.' | Lord Balfour of Burleigh was elect- | ed chairman of the Carnegie Educa-| tional Trust on nomination of Lords Bryce, Haldane and Shaw, succesd-" ing Lord Elgin. near- | with artist life in the fashionable Bo-| Cleo Ridgley and Wallace Reid! me- | { thods he employs in a vain endeavor] gives Cleo! Reid has the distine- | { tion of being one of the wmost popular, | between | John Laidlaw & Son 4 ~ New E b id I The showing this year has many entirely new designs in narrow edgings, insertions, skirting and underwear embroideries in great variety. A "We have collected a very large assortment of finer embroideries in Nainsook, cambric and Swiss, for those who delight in making up dainty underwear. Fine baby edges. Medium width trimming edges. Insertions to match above. Flouncing embroideries. Corset cover embroideries. $0000 tpg 'Fine White Underwear Cottons French Finish Nainsook Fine in weave and finish for trousseaux; six grades to choose from, 18¢c, 20¢, 25¢, 30c, 35¢, 40c. Spanish Longcloth Medium weight, soft finish. 42 inches wide, 25¢, 30c, 35¢, 40c. Fine Longcloth. / Laidlaw's near-linen trad: a fine cotton for ladies andchildren's lingeries. Horrockses English Longcloth, 30c, 35c¢, 40c. Horrockses English Nainsook, 30c, 35c¢, 40c, 50c, 60c. |, a insertion and 5c a line for each consecutive insertion; or 10¢ a line each insertion, if reading Announcements for societies, clubs, or other organizations of future events, where no admis- sion fee is charged, may be in- sorted In this elama at ome cent a word, with a minimum of 25¢ for one insertion. . sre showing sume Vv calf blucher sizes very xeliabls lines of boots for to53 . Pi hore $3 00 The Lockett Shoe Store P. 5 -- Travelling goods that come back intact.