: ! THE D THURSDAY, JUNE 5, 1023. _WHIG o AILY BREKTISH KARNIVAL rE BIG SUCCESS (Continued From Page One) London View in Oils, by F. M. Bell-Smith, loaned by S. Calvin. Tranquility, water color, by E:T. Duval, loaned by €.-MePherson. | Westminster Abbey, water color, | ounea iy T..A. Kidd. | The/Intruder (oils), loaned by C | Livingston. Meadow with Cattle, by T. den, loaned by C. Taylor. Bridge on the Genil (Spain), by { A. M. Toweraker, loaned by Harry | | Wilder. | | I! 1 tors. It occupies two sections and | is tastefully set off with trellises of summer flowers and holiday settings. It 1s an attractive exhibit and typi- cal of the big women's store, KINGSTON KIWANIS KARNIVAL ARMOURIES, JUNE 3 TO 7 INCLUSIVE TWO SPECIAL ATTRACTIONS: Moore's Toyland Display Featuring Toys, Dolls and Playthings. Special Doll Bargains Every Day. MOORE'S SPORTING GOODS Many Fine Displays. The work of Kiwanian Harry Lawes on the large plate which ad- vertises the Stamp Exhibit - has re- ceived much favorable comment. Stamps are laid out in a design of three large "K's" in a frame, a good advertisement for the exceptional display within. Lockett's Shoe Store has an attrac- tive booth showing travelling bags, suit cases, trunks and general lea- ther goods, Next to it is a nice ar- rangement of suitings and cloth by Beautiful framed Tapestry (Bibli-| }1¢ Crawford Company tatlors. Far-| cal subject), loaned by Dr. R J.| M a on Sue finds the booth of W. J.) hor : | Moore on, tires, and the Tawitiar | ol n " 2 - Very Satistying, Woodland roll call answer. Bill Moore, | ; t-i-re-s" comes to mind Just 8 py by Mrs. | : : Ny | pne, My Obrien, loaned by opposite is found Kiwanian Hoag's | | booth with a complete display and a | A wonderful picture, after Joseph : 3 yon Th 2 Ep Dae .» | feature of Parker Fountain" Pens. | s: , entitle p ' | Guess how many pills in the bo by Mrs. I. G. Bogart i y > B Ye Te hy . LL . * a A Stitch in Time, by H. J. Dobson, | "7 *I% a camera. : BCA RoW | n vat She left of the entrance is! L.A. RS.W. : | the Manufacturers' Life Insurance i y Fidler, R.O. | : Harrowing, by Harry Fidler | booth (Kiwanian M. G. Johnston). | 1 {It is a striki rtrayal of the Ia : the many | ,. J y ne Be bi 9 ow = es the lives of two widows in different cir- | Karnival and not the Art Gallery is | tants the oe Vhose Bushang | | like going to Niagara and missing |, Sq al{ ins one whoss Rus-| [ifke gon ; rand neglected that important mat- | . ter. The Halliday Electric - Com- | pany's booth attracts with its bright Kiwanian merchants have some | S182 she ee display and farther! fine displays throughout the booths 2°"F e line we find the R. H. | he mae TO re W. J Croth- | Toye & Company exhibit of Christie | or "0 vod "white apd) Biscuits and Moir's Chocolates. | Bice buckh, give 29a, a 46% of Prince The Central Garage has two fine! of Wales chocolates every half hour, | C3T8 On display, touring models of | oe : | the Oldsmobile and the Chevrolet. | Sargent's Drug Store booth, in addi-| 2 . ! A na} | Sutherland's shoe store shows an ex- | ao tne she vy | SPO Bae St of se ol Ey CIDERDOWN (WIL 78 shoes, With strips of the beautiful McLintock's Guaranteed, Ventilated Down Comforters with beautiful Sateen Coverings; some 1n panel effects; others have Medal- lion Centres with plain borders to match. All shades in the lot, Relining of Your Fur Coat We have on hand a large stock of beautiful Silks and Figured - Crepes. The latest designs and patterns for the coming season. Summer prices prevailing. JOHN MKAY td. "The Fur House" | Moore's Tire Display Featuring Dominion Tires Row- | TOYS | | | { | | | TEA BALLS | - TAO means supreme. The finest Tea you have ever tasted-- , tiny bud leaves fro e tips of tea plants of the finest gardens in Ceylon, India and Java, accurately measured and packed by special machines in handy gauze bags. Each bag will make 3 to 4 cups Tea. 10 Ball Tins 50c. 20 Ball Tins . HENDERSON 'S GROCERY Agent for Ming Cha Tea Established Most Expensive Tea Grown THE PRINCE Some Fine Displays. The month of pretty brides and fragrant * fléwers. the father of the prize baby. Inci-| dentally it is a great feather in the | leather used in their manufacture. | : Everything for the well-dressed man | cap of 'Kiwanian A. H. Fair that 1t- | 8 " tle Loran Doolan, first prize winner | Is found in George Vanhorne's dis- | OF WALES 'CHOCOLATES AT THE ~ KIWANIS KARNIVAL Look for Crothers' display at the Armouries. Get a Ticket from our representa- tive at the door and deposit coupon at our Booth. A box of Prince of Wales' Choco- lates will be drawn for every half hour. Get the lucky number and be the proud possessor of some of the finest Chocolates in the land. . BELLEVILLE Creamery (fresh made), Ib 88c. Island Rolls and Prints, extra choice, 1b. 20¢, Raisins Fancy Seedless ....8 lbs. 85c. Walnuts Good quality (last lot) 1b. 83c. Peas and Corn Extra fine quality ..2 tins 20c. Potatoes a Chance a you live you will. If you die . who will 2! Buy an educational policy in ° It will guarantee your child a start in life. The soomer do it the cheaper it will be. real you Ask or 'phone for information. of the baby show, has been raised on Hemlock Park Dairy milk and is still strong for it at meal hours. R. J. Reid presents a summer furniture setting and on his right A. Davis & Son display a fine booth of finished | leathers, made up into standard shoes of fashionable design, or sus- pended in sheets around the booth, showing the twenty odd materials! used in tanning-one plece of leather. Dodge Brothers motor cars, sedan and touring, occupy a large space and are much admired. The C. W. Lindsay Company's feature display is a beautiful Weber reproducing player plano, a magnificent instru- ment that reproduces exactly the| shading and expression of. the ar- tist. It is an instrument worth ex- amining and is entirely turned out at the Kingston Weber factory. The Coca Cola Company hag a booth of especial beauty and simplicity. Craw- ford"s Grocery has' a special Wag- staffe exhibit with a demonstrator in charve. H. W. Newman Electric Company. The H. W. Newman Electric Com- pany display, to the right from the main entrance, is under the direc, tion of Mr. Harry Breck and he has #n even better exhibit than usual. Radio is the feature and there is on view a fine receiving set with loop aerial, the whole thing occupying no | more than five square feet of space and being easily shifted from room to room with no outside wires at all. Coffield electric washers, fancy| lamps and fixtures, and a somviels | line of electrical appliances, includ- | ing the Armstrong three-deck grid, are there for explanation and dem- onsetration. A powerful and attrac- tive amplifier adds a finishing touch to the radio display. College Inn Cigar Store. Golf clubs, golf bags, golf balls and equipment, tennis racquets and balls, sporjing shoes, sporting uni- forms, fishing rods and tackle, base- ball gloves, bats and balls--every- thing in the line of equipment for games and sports may be found in the display of the College Inn Cigar Store (Kiwamian Wallle Cusick). The booth is just to the right of the Another shipment (extra fine) District Manager Mutual Life pack 5. ROUGHTON "Phone 610 Save the Difference Cullen's CASH AND CARRY Special for Wednesday and Saturday ! FRUIT BREAD Wholewheat Bread Every Day. F. C. HAMBROOK CATERING IN ALL ITS BRANCHES 118 BROCK SIREET - P eople for whom we Il Make, Fit and Design soon discover that we know how to put that quality in the lenses which restores the. normal vision and prevents eye-strain. i So I 8S ue v taken from the cow in the; Everybody who has the least sen- ng is better than milk taken in [sibility or imagination derives a cer- main entrance and its bright display cannot fall to attract. Good hick- ory shafted golf clubs as low as three doll cannot fail to attract 'followers of the hiking game and for every sport there is some special attraction in the booth of the Col- lege Inn, Store. Wright & Ditton's Canadian sporting goods are especi- ally featured. ~ x ---- 3.' A. McNabb Company. - One of the most beautiful booths in the building, and of very great interest to the lady visitors, is that of 'the J. A. McNabb Company, la- dies' ready-to-wear, supervised by Kiwanian Charlie Lapp, the manager of the McNabb store. A light and tasty background gives a welcome and seasonable touch of spring and early symmer which is further hanced by very original and attrac- tive flower stands. The exhibit oc- || cuples a double-sized booth and por- trays attractive gowns for the Jume wedding, with the bride, the bride's mother and the bridesmaids, as well as many of the guests, provided for in the handsome gowns. The Me- Nabb booth is attracting great at- tention and is a credit to the store. Hundreds of the Karnival visitors have expressed surprise and delight at the exhibition of Norman Silver Plate, the product of the Kingston factory at the foot of Gore sreet. It i8 the first really large display of this product has been opensd: to the public and it is certainly a revelation. Steacy's Limited, The booth of Steacy's Limited, showing fashionable frocks of the season and.a beautiful line of exclu- &ive French designs, is another point ) morning, tain pleasure from pictures. £ \ oy of exceptional interest for lady visi- 4 | play, even to the walking stick. It is neatly arranged and set off.' A wonderful grandfather clock sets off the display of Smith Bro- | thers, jewelers, which is a miniature | living room. A special table carries | on exhibit of genuine jade and am- | ber and is much admired by the Karnival visitors. Rare china forms | a pleasing touch in the background, | just before a fireplace with mantel | clock and specfal lighting. McGall's | exhibit of Victor records and ma- | chines, with 'popular and classic | airs and fine instruments, comes in | for notice and further down one meets the neat booth of Kinnear & <'Esterre, with . general display of attractive jewelry. The George Mills Company exhibit | is a masterpiece of decorative work, | raw furs being used throughout and | beautiful fur garments on models | for the admiration of the spectators. | A great amount of care was put on | the booth and the result justifies | it. Moore's second booth, near the | ice-cream stands, shows toys of all | kinds and varieties and has as a| centre 4 giant' camel which nods | sleepily twenty-fqur hours a day. On the left of Dougall McKnight's | ice-cream booth is Kiwanian Wattie Macnee's {nsurance booth-- where he will insure anything and everything. -------- Special Prizes, i For Saturday night, the last night! of the Kiwanis Karival, the com- | mittee in charge has secured fine | prizes. Fqr the best faney dress cos- tume on the floor on Saturday eve- ning a prize of fifteen dollars will be given with a second prize of ten dol- lars, This is for best dressed man or woman, boy or girl. Boys are reminded not to forget the fancy 'dressed bicycle contest on | Saturday next. Want Provincial Audit. It was learned by the Whig on Thursday afternoon that a petition. is being circulated in Kingston town- | ship and is being largely signed, asking that a provincial auditor be sent to examine the books of King- ston township, It is the with. bf the ratepayers that the matter should be cieared up to the entire satisfaction of all concerned. "Kingston's Famous Fur Store" Have You Seen Our Display at K.K.K.? We make and. sell Furs all the year round and our big Fur Show Rooms are always replete with new Fur models made from the choic- est of pelts. WE STORE FURS Are yours safe for the Sum- mer? We will store them for you of all efire or thought of These make desirable All sizes in the celebrated Gold new, oval designs. prices. $13.50 real Eiderdown Quilts for. . . $16.50 real Eiderdown Quilts for . . . $18.50 real Eiderdown Quilts for $23.50 real Eiderdown Quilts for BEAUTIFUL LINENS Just received a big range of beautiful, double Damask Table Cloths, with Napkins to match. All pure Linen. wedding pr esents. | FANCY Medal make, in P 1 . Pyar | Larger size Note the low prices: -- With dainty colored borders. . Guestsize........ ......50e snare eens sd O08 c......$13.50 rer rea aes4315.00 crn in areninee « 319.50 LINEN TOWELS Pure Linen Huck Towels--all sizes ........... 45c. to $1.00 each Newman & Shaw THE ALWAYS BUSY STORE ' 5,000 FREE MASONS. To Assemble at Belleville for Corner Stone Laying. The largest Masouic gathering ever held in Canada will assembie at Belleville, Ontario, on Tuesday June 17th when the Grand Lodge of Canada in Ontario will lay the corn- er stone of a monument which is being erectggd to the U. E. Loyalists at Belleville. Besides the Grand Lodge officers, five thousand Free Masons from Canada and from Am- erican cities will participate in the ceremony. It is 140 years since the U. E. Loyalists settled in the native for- est of what is now Ontario] They brought Freemasonary over from the New Republic, and notwithstand- ing their struggles for a livelihood in their new home, they kept Free- masonary alive. In some instances members walked sixty miles to at- tend lodge held in a private home or the back room of a taverh. In 1801 a committee of three walked from Meyers Creek (now the City of Belleville) to Kingstdm, sixty miles, to present a petition for a dispensa- tion to form a lodge and that lodge has been in existence ever since. The monument will be of a simple inexpensive character to typify the humble beginnings of the U. E. Loyalists, and will coneist of a re- presentation of a log cabin mounted on a solid expansive pedestal with four seats underneath. It will be constructed of cement made from stone and clay off a farm originally settled by one of the pioneer set- tlers. 'WAS ELECTROCUTED. : Henry Warren Meets Death at Deloro Smelting Plant. Belleville, June 5.--Henry - War- ren, aged forty, was electrocuted at the Delora smelting and refining plant last night while turning on power. The switch had become charged and 550 volts passed into his body. Medical students of Queen's and Varsity, there for the summer, tried resuscitation, but the man was beyond help. There were eight cases and 12 judgment summonsés, resulting in five committals, at the Division Court on Wednesday. Judgment was re- served in an action brought by Wil- lam Walker against R. B. Bishop for $120 damage to his rig when the defendant hit it with 'his car, going down hill after dark. Fire, Moths or Theft. | ated upon in the General Hospital Gordon, the young son of Attor- ney-General W. F. Nickie, was oper- Thursday morning and late in the afternoon his progress was repo to be satisfactory. . Summertime Hats Inspection invited. Parisian Shop 822 BROCK STREET { _ IN MARINE CIRCLES Sule The steamer Mapleboro passed down to Montreal on Thursday. ed for Toronto and Hamilton morning. The steambarge Buena Vista a rived from Fairhaven" and cieare for Smith's Falls with coal. The steambarge Susie Chipman 1s at Richardson's with grain from Buf- falo. The schooner Mary Daryau r 4d! was wharf. 3 The tug Russell arrived and clear- ed west with the barge Isobel Reid | | | | | | | Rotary Club Activities. There will be no special speaker | || at the Week)y luncheon of the King- |[f ston Rotary Club to be held in the | British-American hotel on Friday .a: 12.30 (noon). The time will be giv- en over to a business session, the principal item of business being the' International Rotary convention to be held in Toronto, opening on Juna 15th. A special effort is being made to have every member of the club attend the convention if only for a day so as to have a hundred per cent. attendance. ' The Kingston ciub had one hun- dred per cent. meeting last month, while the average for May was 94 per cent. The call has been sent out for four hundred per cent. meetings this month. MAY AGAIN REFUSE. To Grant Any Money For County Good Roads. It looks as if the Frontenac county council will again refuse the money for the good roads system. The' council had a session on Thursday forenoon and came to no decision in the matter. Councillor Christopher Graham moved a by-law to provide the money but strong objection was taken to it. It is understood that the by law will be presented to the comncil again this afternoon. Th *T. J. O'Connor, of the provincial euditor's department, Toronto, is in the tity on three weeks' vacation ond is being warmly greeted by his wide circle of friends, v | I expected to clear to-day from Booth's | |i guests of Mrs. "FOR 5 ALE" Now All kinds to gele homes or investmen $3.300--New brick bungalow, all | » ot from for || $2,000--New frame large yard and driveway. $3.500--Frame dwelling with gar- | age and all Improvement, | south side. | $1,400 yame dwelling and deep low, §i $3,000--Frame dwelling, with cor. ney lot. $7,500 Double brick on Earl Street, hot water and hot afr Tariiiee; all improvements and $1,100--Frame bungalow, 4 rooms en. Insurance, Houses to Rent, MULLIN] ' Cor. Division and \Johnson Sts. Phones: Office ....... 53ow \ April 20th, mt Queen St, opposite St. ---- MONU Before placing y order for a Monument, or ha Letter ing done in cemetery } SEE J. E.Mullen " Agovernment inspe dian banks is provi scheme which Hon. J ing minister of finance, submitted to the committee of the [House of Com= mons Thursday morning. Chancellor Marx tolj the Relchstag that the reparation experts' plan must be carried out to save Ger. many. Miss Isobel Huddleston and Miss Mabel Cronk, Earl /Street, were visit- ors to Watertowns on Tuesday, the le. ded for In a A. Robb, act- . Boy!