Daily British Whig (1850), 19 Apr 1917, p. 8

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{ THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, THURSDAY, APRIL 19, 1917 A -- MEN---Let us show you these new Spring Clothes From the most pronounced English cut to the most conservative business suit. We've got them all, $15.00 up to $25.00. You are certain to be satisfied. We guarantee it. ® ® 9 . Livingston's Brock Street . If Off Your Route, It Pays To Walk. Womens Suits 5 So many different styles of suits are in our immense assortment and so individual are the styles that-each woman may feel that she has an individual suit. Every new color and material is repre- sented in this display, including many ex- clusive designs not shown elsewhere. Mod- erately priced from J $14.75 to 45.00 Ny - - Separate Coss. Distinctive and exclusive designs, smart styles, large variety and unusually moder- ate prices. : hie b wo tte d | THEATRICAL News { | To-night "The Flame." Before the curtain rose for the first Flame" Richard Wal- author and producer, the productidn some $60,000. And the playgoer who sees the mammoth productio the diver- sity dnd beauty of 1 's, the ex- ceptional and eXpens detajl with which it has been garnished can eas- ily understand fact Not only in its uipment is "The time' on "The ton Tully, its had put into this sceni Flame" a big undertaking, but on the | side it is exceptional for the t f forty players acting cast cor At the Gr Ss 0 some nd to-night Jeff's Wedding is {he title offering which Gus Hill the cost of a small scenery, costumes, to make the Mutt and of the new has prepared at fortune for' new stor d gverything most elaborately magnificent music- al comedy production the stage has ever held. It all comes to the Grand Friday, April. 20th, matinee and night. "Fair and, Warmer." Selwyn & Company will- 'present their newest big success, "Fair and over the country on the strength of its year-long run of unprecedented prosperity at the eMinge Theatre, New York, at the Grand on Saturday April 21st, matinee and night. "Fair and Warmer" begins in the early evening, stays up all night, and comes to a festive conclusion at noon of the following day, after having disrupted two households, devasted one "tame robin%® reassorted four peaple who then repudiate the assortment, and finally hailed bless- ings and benedictions upon righteous and unrighteous with an impartial hand At Griffin's, The evolution of a strong, self-suf- ficient woman out of a social butter- fly is seen in "The Price She Paid," which will be the feature picture at Griffin's Theatre today, Friday and Saturday. Miss Clare Kimball Young whose popularity with the moving | picture public increases constantly, HS the star of this offering. On the same bill will also ae sh wn a splen- did Morosca picture efititled "His | Sweeheart," with the celebrated por- i traver of Italian characters, George Beban in the leading role. Other good reels make up a programme which cannot be surpassea for excellence. \t the Strand. For the last three days of this week Gail Kane will he seen in the latest | feature photcplay entitled "The Man She Married." It is a play with a strong heart-pull and intense est, with a surprise at the close. Helen Holmes in the secoad episode of "A Lass of the Lumberlands," comedy reels and polite vaudeville will also hold the boards. : - "Who Get's The Diamond?" What becomes of the child? What happens to Vivian Marston What is the fate $f Blair Stanley This will all be answered in four FEELFINE' TAKE "CASCARETS" FOR LIVER, BOWELS Spend 10 Cents! Sick, Headachy, Con- stipated. Can't Harm Yom! Best Cathartic for Men, Women and Children. Your system is filled with an accumulation of bile and bowel' poison which Keeps you bik ious, headachy, dizzy, tongue coated. breath bad and stomach sour Why Enjoy life! don't you get a 10-cent box of Cas- | carets at the drug store and feel bully. Take Cascarets epjoy the nicest, gentlest Hver and bowel cleansing you ever experienc- ed. You'll wake .up with a clear head, clean tongue, lively step, rosy skin, and looking and feeling fit. Mo- Warmer," whose fame has spread all | re-| inter-{ Don't Stay Bilious, | tonight and | ! | sequel to the "Piam- mening at -mght episodes in the ond from the Sky the King Edward, t "THE PINE KNOT." A Publication of The 230th Forestry Battalion. "The "Pine Knot" is a breezy little four-page paper that is being publish- ed by Seérgt. C. H. Gibbons and other i enterprising memuoers of the 230th Forestry Battalion at Brockville. The Whig is" in receipt oi a late copy, and the boys certainly deserve credit for | their accomplishment One of the items may be interesting to the local infantrymen. It, is dedicated to the | 253rd, and reads: ~ "Our friends of the 253rd will. doubt- less appreciate the jatest story of the | Higlan s mon in France.and the won- | derment he has excited among . the | residents. { "It cannot be a woman's-mon," pro- | nounced one as a vraw laddie in kil- ! ties strode by, "for look you at the moustacios!" : "But no, she cannot be a man," was the equally confident reply, "ior see { you not the*robe?" { "Ah, gentlemen," ruled the judicial | third with proud finality, "I have it. It is the famous Middle Sea Regiment, REACHED PENITENTIARY St. Pierre and Richmire Brought to Kingston. chapter in the St.Pierre enacted on Wed- when Emerson St Pierre convicted of manslaughter in connection: with the-death of his father William St: Pierre, and Nettie Richmire, Emerson's sweetheaft, who pleaded guilty to being an accessory after the fact, reached the peniten- tiary to serve their terms. Emerson St. Pierre was sentenced by Justice Latchford to serve the rest of his natural life as an expia- tion for his crime, and the girl, who is not yet seventeen years of age, was given a five-year sentence. The last murder case was nesday morning, O.H.A. ASSISTS MOVEMENT. Résidence Rule Suspended For Boys | Who Work 'on Farms. J. Ross Robertson, chairman of the sub-committee of the O.H'A., an- nounces that the Outario Hockey As- sociation will suspend the opera- tion of the August residence rule in the casé of High school boys and others who become members of the "Farm Service Corps" in the Prov- ince of Ontario or any ther Prov- ince.®and a t in fhe greater food production movement for Canada The boys will be released from school at the end of the week for work qn farms, provided they agree to re- main and work in the farms for at least three months Frontenac Cheese Board. \t~the imaugural meeting: of the Frontenac. Cheese Board, held on Thursday afternoon, thirty cheese boarded by Glenburnie sold at 23%c. lL. W. Murphy was -the purchaser I'he Board was addressed by Anthony Rankin, M.P.P., G.. C. Publow, chief mstructor. for Omtario, and Joseph Cramer, the cheese king of Frontenac County here were 200 cheese boarded Expert Arrived. A. E. Pay, of the Patterson Company, Montreal, arrived to-day to superintend a number of roofs of the | Barret Specification Type, for Sim- mons Bros. Any person contemplat- ing roofing should take advantage of his experience. This roofing is about two-thirds the cost of &etal roofing Phpne 404, oe Mfg Can Still Bax in New York. The Davis Bill. recommended by Governor Whitman, to repeal laws legalizing boxing in New York State, | failed of passage in the Assembly. The vote was 74 ayes to 56 noes. The !introducers took steps to have the measure called up again later in the session Lieut. G. Coward Wounted. Mark Coward, Mine street, received a message on Thursday that his son Jdeut. George Coward, who left Can- ada with the 80th and transferred to the 50th Battalion, had been wounded badly in the ankle. He is now in a {London hospital. thers can give a whole Cascaret to a | time they are harmless -- néver gripe or sickeh. wr sick, cross, bilious, feverish child any | Mrs. James Armstrong Toronto, to be with her sister, |¢ Mann, who is ilk wert, to Mrs. I A A cA et A tet te AA et arte "| morning. | MUTRY OROLES. | The following have reported for the field officers' course at the IS. of L:} Major R. D. Suther:and, 253rd; Capt. |! W. J. Thorn, 45th; Capt. W. J. Hoar, | 252nd; Capt. H. V. rotts, 252nd; Lieyt. H. V. Mcintyre, 240th; Lieut. H. T.!| Noonan, 240th W. W. Nichol, who is in charge of the vocational training for "returned soldiers, is in the city, and is getting in touch with the boys at tite convales- cent homes to learn 'the conditions and what will be necessary to bring. the men back into civilian work Lieut. Alfred Light, R.C.H.A. band-] master, was presented, on Thursday, ! with a gold mounted pipe and the members of his band with cigars, by the Veterans' Association, Command- ant J. G. Evans, Lieut. Gales, H. W. Shaw anel Capt. McKenzie speaking a few words of appreciation. A "Under no circumstances are Can- adian troops to cross the border in| uniform" is an order issued on Wed-| nesday. Lieut. T. J. Fleurey will command a railway construction draft. Corpl. D. H. Kennedy has been! provisionally appointed Q.M.S: of the! 253rd Q. U. H | Alcohol, wines and spirituous li-! quors will in future be requisitioned | through the medical services and not | through the Army Service Corps. The | new order states that the change is| due to-the present restriction on the | purchase of wines and liquors in sev- eral of the Provinces. { The drafts 'from' "C" Battery, R.C. HA. and 72nd (Queen's) Battery, which left the city recently, have ar- rived safely in England On the steamship, which was not named in! | the message, were also a number of | nursing sisters. | ' | Pte. Peter Moore Wounded. | Mrs. Peter Moore, 17 Upper Charles | | street, received a telegram Thursday | | morning stating that her husband, | | Pte. Peter Moore, 20th Battalion, had | been wounded in the right arm and | admitted to No. 8 Swationary Hospital, | Wimeran. Pte. Moore went overseas | with the 146th, Battalion and Was ; transferred to the 20th Battalion I meee i First Baptist Church. i | Reports on the year's work in the! | First Baptist Church were presented! iat a meeting Wednesday evening. The | | year was ong, of the best in the |church's history. The ladies served light refreshments during a social hour ------------------ | John O'Neil, fined $10 and costs, |for being intoxicated, will on Friday | be -charged with having liquor in a [place other than his own dwelling. | { It is alleged he had liquor in a black-| smith shop John Tomkins, going overseis as an aviator, was presented with a purse of money by the employees of Anglih's Mill. 'where he was employed' as a | draftsman. | Larry Crane, a French-Canadian, ' died on the C.P.R. train between Tweed and .Havelock on Saturday \Was Troubled With | Shortness of Brasil | ---- When the heart becomes affected, | there ensues a feeling of a choking | semsation, a shortness of breath, pal-| pitation, throbbing, irregular beat-| | ing.. smothering sensation, dizziness, | {and a weak, sinking, all-gone feel-| | ing of oppression and anxiety, | | The nerves become unstrung, you { dread to be alone, have a horror of: | society, start at the least noise and | {are enerally fatigued. | Oh the first sign of the heart be-| coming weakened or the nerves un-| strung, Milburn's Heart and. Nerve | Pills should be taken. They are just | what you require at this time. They] | regulate and stimulate the heart, | "and strengthen and restore the whole! nerve system. { Mrs. C. M. Cormier, Buctouche,| N.B., writes: "Since two years ago I} was troubled with a shortness of] breath, and sometimes I could hardly | breathe. I went to see several doc-| tors and they said it was from my, heart and nerves, but they did not | seem to do me any good.' One day I got one of your B.B.B. Almanacs, and read of a case similar to mine. | "I bought a box of Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills, and after taking it I noticed such a change that [ kept on taking them until I had used four more boxes, when | was cured." Mitburn's Heart and Nerve Pills are 50c, a box, three boxes tor $1.25 at all dealers, or mailed direct on receipt o rice by The T. Milburn Co. Limited, 'oronte, Ont. : OAT AAA) Afternoon The charm of good materials as well as that of a smart cut is noticeable in these new Dresses just received. We invite you to see these to-morrow and as there is a great variety of new designs we can only mention prices here and the prettiest models are only one of a kind. STYLISH POPLIN AFTERNOON DRESSES ~ $12.50 to $25.00. TAFFETA AFTERNOON DRESSES, $19.50 to $42.50 CREPE DE CHENE DRESSES ...:....$13.95 to $25.00 BLACK GEORGETTE CREPE DRESSES $25.00 4 NEW SPRING COATS We have had to buy_many more Coats to cope with the big demand. So far Those who dre still waiting for a Stylish Spring Coat, this will interest you. ' PRICES FROM $8.25, $10.00, $12.00 on up to $30.00. WOMEN'S SUITS 9 1 ' A great variety of New Spring Suits and this is the time to make selections, a number of new makes just received. ; You may make any selection you wish to-morrow even if not ready to buy just yet. . STYLISH SUITS, $18.00 to $45.00. ry John Laidlaw & Son | Known the world Th Lockett Shoe P.S.-- We have a splendid cleaner for colored kid, Ww OVER SHOES for their splendid spring stock for women and men is now fitting qualities. © Our ~ hae Store ran,

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