Ontario Community Newspapers

Daily British Whig (1850), 5 Feb 1920, p. 5

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In Stock WR. McRae & Co. \ 1 : } / "RSDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1920, PHONE 1670 0. Avkrovd & Son Carpenters and Builders 21 MAIN STREET FOR SALE ~PIPES, all sizes. ~RADIATORS. THE DAILY BRITISH WHI pr 7 G Mom | King i { S on and Vicinit w ewe MILITARY TENTS. ~ ~Large pieces of CANVAS. ew, ete. 1. Cohen & Co. 278 Ontario Street. Phone 534 AAA Ferns, palms, funeral designs, 115 Brock St. Phone 228. Pr caso At IN" Fresh Cut Flowers floral | 38PPEr In St. George's hall. sprays, wedding honguets made to order | F. J. JOHNSON, Florist. | Enjoyed a Sleigh Ride, | The choir of St. George's Cath- {edral enjoyed its annual sleigh ride Tuesday night, and afterwards had a Reduced Price tu Boys Clothing Prevost, Brock street, has in stock fifty boys suits, all wool tweed, also olue and black serge, at low prices | See the value before buying else- ILASSCO'S PURE fLA Strawberry Jam Raspberry Jam Black Currant Jam Plum Jam Pench Jam PAPER HANGING Estimates on work freely given. Wall Paper for Bale. H. ROWLEY | where, i ------------ Recent Sale of Real Estate, E. W. Mullin & Son have conclud- |ed these sales: Brick dwelling, Main | street, owned by W. R. Ludlow, to 1 Slarenes Hanley; brick dwelling, --Gooneberry Jam nl Orange Marmalade 840 Barrie St. : Phone 1260}. [to W. R. Ludlow. ~Red Currant Jelly w=Crabapple Jelly Grape 'Jelly 3 Brambleberry Jelly D. COUPER i -3 Princeas Street iy 3 Prompt delivery, 'TERMS | Ladies' Suits, Skirts, {Men's Suits, Overalls, Undorwear, | Towelery., Suitcases, eto. {= N. Morris, 37 hens WOOD It Pays to Buy Four Sawed in Stove Groceries And Meat Lengths at R. J. Shales & Son BOOTH & CO, Foot West Street Phone 133 71 PINE ST. Phone 1583 and Cet Prompt Delivery WE SELL ON EASY / 4 King St. II tA ' x ! Ha A., Queen's, was the speaker be- A -------------- Died In Hospital Here, John Clarke, aged seventy-nine, | passed away in the hospital here on | Tuesday. The remains were a {Arden by 8. 8. Corbett, undertaker, on Wednesday, for interment. ------r----t-- Was Ably Handled. { At the Belleville High School on | Monday evening, Prof. T. Callander, | fore the Women's Canadian Club. Hie | subject, "What Women Can Do-For | Canada," was very ably handled. | -- ---- { Fined For an Offence. | A resident of Mallprytown was fin- ed $25 and costs of $8 at Brockville for being intoxicated waile on the prohibited list. In addition on com- plaint of his wife, he was bound over to keep the peace in the sulin of $400, | furnished by himself and one surety. | ot -------- | Inyerary Resident Dead, | "The death of John Ferguson, an | old and respected farmer occurred at | rc treat peat sss ning, FOR SALE House and barn, and three acres of land, two miles from the city, W. H. GODWIN & SON Real Estate and Insurance 89 Brock St. Phone 424 We have a supply of cut hard wood and Repairing, Watchmaker and Jeweler G. W. LYONS 849 Princess St. Phone 1866. Kepairs done accurately, promptly, and guaranteed for one year. Just Arrived Campbeil's Tomato Soup Campbell's Vegétathie Soup Clark « Tomato soup Clark's Vegetable Soup Try one of our unbreakable Watch Glasses Inverary on Wednesday. The deceas- | 4, Was seventy years and ten mohths old, and lived at Inverary practically { all his life, He #s survived by; his | wife, The Smith's Falls town has passed a resolution calling upon (J. A. Stewart, M.P., and Dr. J. W. { Edwards, M.P., to bring the matter | of the lowering of the water in the | Rideau lakes to the attention of the House of Commons, | ce -------------- | Members' Aid Is Asked. | council ------------ | Receives Mons Star, | Samuel Turland, son of Mr. and | Mrs. George Turland, Brockville, has | received the Mons Star, 1e Imperial army from August November, | 1914, Mr. Turland was | 'Old Contemptibles" of the | army in the retreat from Mon British 8. Very Ill in New Rochelle. Dr. Paul B. Fitzgerald, formerly of | Clayton, N.Y., now surgeon of New | Rochelle hospital, is dangerously ill re- Fite- Dr. Fitzgerald is a n\tive of Clayton. \ Distributors for Red Ruse Tea~--the | i Good Tea : ; Kingston Co-operative Society Ltd, Corner King and Princess Sts, FOR NuTHING Will make your hens lay like Purina Scratch Feed and Chowe der. Place your orders with us and obtain the best ree elivery to all parts of GOLDEN LION License No. 6-543 2 BIG BARGAINS 70c. Bed Rose Tea .....50c 28¢. Clark's Pork & Beans 18c. Bon Marche G Cor. King and Karl St License Nov 5-37149 Phone 1544 ery ta. That the quality of our ICE CREAM is unexcelled ? Prove it yourself. High Grade Chocolates in bulk and fancy boxes. We stock only those in de. mand. HOT DRINKS, . LBAR' 288 PRINCESS STREET, PHONE 1128. Beware! n-- Flu victims drop dead in streets. Consult 6. HUNTER OGILVIE about a policy in Life Insurance, Sickness lor Accident. sior Life. Agent for Excelsto 281 KING STREET. corner Johnson and Welling. n Streets, Kingston. Tela one 36%. ° DIRECTORY FOR RETURNED MEN, APPLY FR ALE | PASTRY 1 n Wednesday noon for Toromto, to attend the annual meeting' of the company, and from there he will go to Florida with the Two Hundred Thousand Club on their annual outing. Delegation Was Authorized. With reference to the action of ve- ,terans in connection with the cdoun- cil on Monday, as reported in the press, the local secretary of the G. | W.V.A. states that the delegation to the Council Chamber on Monday was authorized and arranged by the lo- cal Veterans' Advisory Committees consisting of an equal number of re- presentatives from each veterans' or- ganization" with power to act. The n street, owned by W. Truman, | with the...» | action of this committee will, no doubt, be endorsed by the G.W.V.A. 1 at next meeting. ---------------- No Winner Declared Yet. As yet it is not known what team { Kingston wijl meet in the semi-finals of the O.H.A.. "The western group, composed of Lindsay, are and it is not k win out. ' It is {may be the team, very evenly matched, Fined $250 and Costs. { Charles Carr, Trenton, was yes- { terday arraigned in the police court on a charge of having liquor in a place other than his usual dwelling f Blase. Inspector R. C. Arnott was prosecutor. Carr had four cases of { liquor tn a shack. Magigtrate O'- | Rourke fined Carr $256 and costs jon his plea of guilty. rte ---- | Four Hundred Accompany Team. About four hundred followers of [the Kingston hockey team went to { Belleville on Wednesday and wit. nessed the game. Although there was no excursion it did not stop the | enthusiasts from. making the trip. | Three or four extra coaches were | | ville at 12.20 a.m. for home. i tu---------------- George F. Johnston in Office. George F. Johnston, reeve' of the township of Front of Leeds and Lans- downe, who has been elected chair- man of the finance committee of the Leeds and Grenville jell, a responsible position, is one of | the foremost residents of Lansdowne. {He is president of the Brockville { Dairymen's Board of Trade and man- ager 0f the Leeds Farmers' Co- Operative Company, Limited, Lans- downs. ------------ { To Show in Canada. | For the first time since before the | is} The | num & Bailey shows, now a part | outbreak of the war a big circus | to tour Canada next summer, | Bar of the Ringling Bros. system, will en- ter the country at Cornwall on July 12th from Watentown, N.Y., and re- | main until July 23rd, first playing Ottawa, then Montreal and returning j to Ontario. The remainder of the it- | inerary is unknown at present. Verona Defeats Sydenham. In the semi finals in the Edwards' ontenac hockey cup competition, erona won from Sydenham, at Sy- nham on Wednesday by a score of to 2. It was a very close game | throughout. As indicated by the score, the teams were pretty evenly matched and look like championship material. |v del cide which team will play Wolfe Is- land for the cup. Verona's margin is small and it {s anyone's game still, George VanHorne was referee, Warns Against Carnivals. Superintendent J. E. Rogers, of the Provincial Police, is sending out a warning to veterans' organiza- tions, etc, to be wary of entering into contracts with carnival compa~ nies from the United States. One or two operated in Ontario last year and more are expected to enter the province this summer. Some of these companies approach local organiza- tions with a proposition to share profits the local men to do the ad- vertising, secure a provincial permit, etc. Before entering into any such contract those approached are ad- vised to get in touch with Superin- tendent Rogers. A Death Coincidence, Two people of the same name, and same age, died on the same day in Toronto, Monday. This is a peculiar circumstances. "Both were women, and had they married men with dif- Oshawa, Peterboro and | Wn whith team will | yught that Oshawa | placed on the train which left Belle- | ounties Coun- | A return match will be | played at Verona and points will de- | eee w wv vw wv | ferent names the story might have | | been altogether different. They both { married men named" Passmore, and when Sarah Ann, aged 73 wife of | | Christopher A. passed away at 46 | Kippendale avenue at 11 a.m. Mon-! day, another followed, and this ac- | counts for the death of Mary EHiot, | widow of the late William Passmore, i at Grace Hospital on the same day. She was also 79 years old. ----e sen A Great Team. Tom Munroe, of London, who offi- [ciated at the Kingston-Belleville | game on Wednesday evening in Belle- | | ville, when asked by the Whig what | he thought of the Kingston team, | | stated that he had seen many games {this season, but he never saw a team which came back in the third period {as the Kingston boys did. "Their | back checking was simply wonder- {ful." The management of the Kings- |ton team was well satisfied with the | way that Munroe handled the game. | He saw in the first period that there | was a tendency to mix things up, so | be banished the offenders for a long period. St. Luke's Ladies' Tea. St. Luke's Women's Auxiliary tea {on Wednesday afternoon was a pro- | | nounced success. It was held at the ! {home of Mrs: Samuel Green, 574! Princess street, and was largely at- | tended. Mrs. Green and Mrs. J. de P. Wright received the guests at the door, while Miss Hentig was in charge of the exchequer. The dining room, where Mrs. W. Carroll and Miss Waddington poured tea and coffee, was a beautiful picture, being decorated with daffodils and ferns. The Misses McFedridge, Green, Me- Cammon, Baker, Carroll assisted with the tea, while Mrs. Reynolds, - Mrs. Murray, Mrs. Compton, Mrs. Berry, Mrs. Colelough and Mrs. Newton were | in charge of the other tables. ------ent Tenry is Dead. PAGE FIVE i EC ES MAC, -- " Stoves And Furnaces FROM CAMP MOHAWK --Moffat Heaters with grates. --MeClary Sunshine Furnaces, ete. AT REDUCED PRICES. S. ANGLIN & CO. Woodworking Factory und Lumber Yards, Bay and Wellington Streets, KINGSTON, Ont. Office Phone 66. Factory Phone 1415, --Tortolse Coal Heaters. ~-McClary Boss Stoves. FREESIAS Do you know this Queen of Bulbous Flower? If not, call and receive a pleasant introduction. They are just coming on the A. D. HOLTON 280 PRINCESS. STREET Phone, 661; Res., 2036W, | Ee mae Hi H Hi Henry, known during the past forty years as one of 'the foremost { j minstrels, died of heart trouble at | { his home in New York, aged seventy- | six. He was a native of Buffalo. | Henry will be recollected hy theatre | | goers in Kingston. He appeared on | | different occasions at the head of his |own company. He wasa famous solo {cornetist, and played a diamond studded gold instrument in his min- | strel act, ~ N | Ne ------------------ | Recovered Stolen dl | Chief Jackman, Arnprior, recover- | ed a quantity of alleged stolen pro- | perty from the firms of John S. Moir | and Q@riftin and Brennan. Goods | which were stolen a few weeks ago, | also a large cotton bag of tobacco and cigarettes, which was stolen from {the tobacco store of William Lader {oute. During the past week Chief Jackman has been carrying on a tho- rough investigation, and was success- ful in locating the goods in the attic of a certain house in town. It is ex- pected that several arrests will re- sult from the investigation. Brave Belleville Captain. Among the honors just gazetted in London, Eng., the name appears of Capt. Allan Harper, of Belleville, who has been awarded the Military Cross for distinguished service in the Army. Capt. Harper went overseas with the 80th Battalion. When the unit. was broken up he was attached to the 50th Battalion, with which he proceeded to France. While cover- ing 'a party of engineers who were placing a sap at a point almost with- in the German lines, Capt. Harper was severely wounded. In fact, his little force was almost completely wiped out, all suffering casualties, while he was left for dead and was the last brought in. With seventeen wounds in his body, he recovered af- ter 15 months in French hospitals and much treatment in England. \ LADY NINETY YEARS 01) MRS. MARTHA HAMILTON OF IN. VERARY BORN IN 1830 #he Came From England In 1883-- The Marvellous Progress of Affairs She Has Witnessed. One of the oldest and most highly respected residents of Frontenac county, in the persoi of Martha Ann Gibbs, widow of the late Robert Ha- milton, recently celebrated the nine- tieth anniversary of her birthday at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Dan- iel Walker, Inverary. Mrs. Hamilton was born at Brighton, Sussex, Eng- land In the year 1830, and came to Canada with her parents in 1833 on a sailing ship that took twenty-one weeks to make the journey. The 'fa- mily setled in Bath where Mrs. Ha milton grew up and married Rober Hamilton of United Empire Loyalist stock. About thirty years ago Rober Hamilton was drowned by accident near Verona. There were nine child- ren born, three boys and six girls, most of whom are still living. Mrs. Hamilton had the joy last year of welcoming back home three of her grandsons who fought in the Canadian Expeditionary Force in the late war. Few Canadians have lived to see such wonderful advancement in science, in social and industrial life as Mrs. Hamilton. While she was born in England, she grew up with Canada and saw it adyance from the status of a colony of pioneers to a place of nationhood in world affairs, and the social life of the people rais- ed to the highest plane yet attained in the civilized world. Only one who has lived through such changes, us Mrs. Hamilton has, can fully appre- ciate the blessings enjoyed by the poor and humble as well as by those in every other walk of life, Mrs. Ha- milton is a devout member of the An- lican church and is interested in the "orward Movement that is now en- aging the attention of all zealous | ONLY TABLETS MARKED ~ "BAYER" ARE" ASPIRIN ot Aspirin at All without the "Bayer Cross" church members everywhere. Among the astonishing things that have had their birth in Mrs. Hamil- ton's time are the steamships that have taken the place of the sailing vessel; the telegraph, telephone, bic- ¥cle, automobile, airplane, phono- graph, binder, seeder, tractor plough, gasoline engine, theese factory, and Creamery, steam and electric rafl- ways that have taken the place of the bridle path. But these are not all by any means. It would not do to leave out the modern varities of breakfast foods that have a hard fight to displace the oldfashioned oat- meal and buckwheat porridge that the past two generations grew up on and will dling to till they die. She has seen the larder onse well stock- ed with dried beef hams, home cured pork hams and bacon, and soused fish, change to be supplied daily with fresh meats of every kind. But she has also seen great changes in the mode of life and enjoyment of the people. The theatre is now pat- ronized daily and there one is not entertained with the mere represen- tation of life by actors, but by the moving pictures of actual life itself. Mrs. Hamilton is a distinguished Ca. nadian' inasmuch as she has been spared to witness: greater progress than many now living may ever see. Our Big Money Saving Sale Still Gang On: Bargain tables are constantly being re- plenished with the biggest values in good Shoes. Come in to-day. -- J. H. Sutherland & Bro. THE HOME OF GOOD SHOES Our Milk I's Thoroughly Clarified Completely pasteurized-- ade ed--reliably bottl VV It is clean--it is safe--it is good. Cag It is 14c. per quart. PHONE 845. Price's Dairy uately cool- LOEW THEATRE UNDERWRITINGS The most profitable investments in Canada. Government bonds, stocks, grain, cot- ton. Investments yielding 5 to 10%. Consult us before making a decision. BONGARD, RYERSON & CO. "The Home of Goed Investments" Phone 1728, 237 Bagot St. / boi i COMFORT FOR (OLD WEATHER Men's 4-Buckle Overshoe Built extra strong; with a heel i isle 0. 0uv 0 mg0, On. 0.5,90.8, » So ony $5.00 Men's Laced Overshoe Extra heavy and felt-lined: only .. uve. teenies. $4.00 without a boot, and will give great iE comfort. : Ha a 4

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