Ontario Community Newspapers

Daily British Whig (1850), 17 Jul 1926, p. 13

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i " Ss. 'International, Truck, in good run. G, CLARK, TWIGG, tio. Dailif, Auctioneer, THE DAILY BRITI SH WHIG cording 2 = =< lL WITH - ANTONIO MORENO 4 4 and ROY D'ARCY - Ye story From the famous George Barr McCutcheon Oh, boy! Oh, girl! Romance such as you've always dreamed of! Madcap adventure you'll never forget ! ir hE CA SPECIAL ATTENTION ! MONDAY NIGHT 4 SID FOX © AND HIS SERENADERS 4 id COMING 3-BIG DAYS-3 JULY 22-23-24 CRICKET FIELD FOURTH ANNUAL TOUR 7, Club Welfare Fund "5 ! : i DAY OR NiGuT | The cab that roreed the prices FRIDAY, JULY 16th, 12 O'CLOCK, AT POLK'S SERVICE STATION, HEAD PRINCESS STREET | stark," her new theatre, a villain, who, in pean are among pean court Oscar. new picture, as the Duke, throne. many"s foremost AMUSEMENTS What the Press Agents Say About Coming Attractions AT THE CAPITOL "Beverly of Graustark™ an Expertly Cast and Romantic Film It takes more than staging and cos- tumes to make a successful play, apg- to Marion Davies, Cosmopolitan star, who insists that the best supporting casts obtainable are far more important than any other aid to the actress. One of the best casts éver assem- ! bled for the noted screen beauty sur- | rounds her in "Beverly of Grau [HEARD OW THE STREET famous Cosmopolitan ve- hicle, coming Monday to the Capitol | Two famous leading men, the past year, has risen to:fame like a meteor, a noted French actress, two famous stage stars ,one American and one Euro the "celebrities sembled for-the roles in the George Barr MeCutcheon romance. Antonio Moreno. hero of 'Mare Nostrum® and other faniohs pictures, plays the leading male role of Dapn- ton in the thrilling romance of Euro- intrigue. hale, long noted as a leading man, plays the secondary lead as Prince Creighton Roy D'Arcy, the singer and Follies star who leaped to fame almost over- {night in "The Merry Widow," plays {the sinister General Marlanx in the Albert Gran, famous on the stage with Margaret Anglin and other famous actresses, is seen power throne, and Paulette Duval, famous on the stage all over the world as one of France's most brilliant stars, is seen in the role of the vampire set to énsmare a prince and steal Max Barwyn, famous Euro- pean stage star ,and known as Ger- behind Shakespearean ac- tor. plays the sinister Saranoff, plot- ter with a throne pretender. Clary, well known. screen character actor, plays the father of the heroine, Sidney Franklin, director of many of the subcesses of Norma and Con- stance Talmadge, is the director of the new production which was lay. ishly staged and costumed at ihe Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer studios. | MARINE port last night, a load of coal. Alexandria Bay. up 8.30 p.m. Belleville, Ju 'her eyes, ring woman at down, 2.45 am. am,; Stewart, up, 7.056 a.m.; Maple- brook, down, 7.45 a.m. The steamer Brulin is not nected in any way with the Mathews Line, as as stated yesterday. It owned and operated by the J. Craw- ford Company of Montreal. Lav Redwing, Buffalo, held by the provincial police two miles east of 'thig city yesterday on a charge of fraud and "obtaining money under false pretences. His wife will be a material witness, the police stated. He will probably be taken to Cobourg by a provineis] An aged womap at Grafton, it is alleged, was on Thursday muleted of a sum of money for the cure of The Sinmac barges cleared from The steamer Jeska from Osweg is in at the Queen street slip with The 88. Rapids King if expected in port here to-night on her trip to The 88. Toronto was in port to- day on her'two trips east and west. Pilot records--Friday: Maplebay, down, 2 p.m.; Langell, up, 3 pm.; Royalite, down, 4 p,m.; McPherson, Saturday: Baird, Brulia, up, 8.50 con- 1s QUACK. DOCTOR 5 PUT UNDER ARREST On Charge of Mulcting an Aged Grafton Weman of . Some Money. ee 17.~=Chiet X.Y, Dr. was the past week a the his Charles Local Briefs Gathered by Re- porters--What the Merch~ ants Are Offering. Ask your neighbor. She wns Moffat. \ Wolfe Island strawberries, day 3 p.m. at Carnovsky's. Mr. P. D. Ritchie of the General Hospital staff is spending his holi- days in Ottawa. William Swaine. plano tuner. Orders received at 100 Clergy street west. 'phone S64w. 3-burner gas stoves with . ovens, $14.95. --Abramsky's, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Atkinson of Detroit, Mich, are visiting Major snd Mrs. W. J. MoManus, 270 Uni- versity avenue. 2-burner gas stoves with $12.95. --Abramsky's. On Tuesday next the ratepayers of Renfrew will see the plans of the new hospital to be built there and to discuss them. . Mr. C. C. Wyatt, accountant at the General Hospital, left on . Saturday morning for a motor trip through Western Ontario. » You'll have a world-beatér when you buy a Moffat gas range. Red currants and raspberries, Montmorency cherries, large black cherries, fancy white and Windsor cherries next week at Carnovsky's. Mrs. John C. Fitchett, Picton, is spending a few weeks in Kingston with her sister, Mrs. A. Bruce, who is undergoing treatment at the Hota! Dieu. Compare and you'{l buy a Moffat §As range. Judging by the daily reports con- cerning Kingston children passing To- ronto Conservatory of Music examina- tions, this ¢ity's younger generation is not going jazzy." A taste for genuine music is being incyleated. OBITUARY Mrs. John McIntyre. The death of Mrs. Johu McIntyre occurred at her residence, 709 Brock avenue, Toronto, on Thursdgy evening, July 8th after a short ill- ness. The late Mrs. McIntyre who was born in Bydenham, spent most of her lite in Kingston, but for the past seven years résided in To. Besides her husband, four daugh- ters and two sons survive, Mrs. O'- Mon- oven, Donnell, Bolton; Mrs. O. Aber, Elmira, N.Y.; Mrs. Rodney Alarle, Kingston; Lillian, Leo and d at home. . Many epiritual and floral offer. ings were received showing the high esteem in which the deceased was held. The pallbearers: were her four brothers, Patrick and Peter Grooms of Sydenham; John of Kingston; and Edward of Buffalo, and two sons-in-law; Rodney: Alarie of King- ston and Oscar Aber of Elmira, N. Y. The funeral took place to St. An- thony's Church on Monday morn. ing where a solemn requiem hizh mass was sung for the happy re- pose of her soul, Interment at Mount Hope cemetery, Toronto. --_-- A -- ---- CATARAQUI TEAM WON, Defeated Encampment 18:9 Gran- ite Won From Kingston 11.8. Friday evening at the Fair Grounds, two more Soft Ball games in the Odd Fellows' league . were played. In the first game, Cataraqui and the Encampment, the Cataraqui team led from the start, and finished the game with an 18-9 score in their favor, In the second game, Granite vs. Kingston, the teams were more evenly matched, and a close, exelting game took place. / It was anybody's game up to the end of the fourth in- nings, score being tied 3-8, In the next thrée innings the Granite batters hit the ball hard, winning the game by a score of 11-8. Both games went seven innings. : Umpires: Connolly and Qarrait. Next games: Friday, July 23rd, Cataraquf plays ton, and Gran. ite meets the pment. CLUB HIRED CARS Hr 1 a (From the Dally Express, London, Eng, July 2nd). The following speech ®y Lord Beaverbrook was broadcast from 2 LO last night: -- This is Dominion Day, which com- memorates' the foundation of the Dominion of Canada. The title was chosen from the sentence in the Bible which declares "Thy Domin- fon shall be from sea to sea"--and Canada looks out eastward to the Atlantic and westward to the Pacific I am glad to speak to you tonight because, like all Canadians, I am proud of my own birthright, and I am also loyal to our common Em- pire, People over here often get very wrong, ideas of Canadian politics and sent{fhents. That 8 because they are informed by those who do not under stand Canada as the native born alone can. They cannot perceive that an intense local patriotism is per- fectly compatible with a strong de- .votion to the Empire. The Proof. The proof of this loyalty to the Imperial canse can be found in Ca- nada's past--most of all in her very recent past. : The contribution of Canada to the war consisted in the first place of 600,000 men in the field. In money her Government advanced 250 mil lions, and her private banks 60 mil- lions--310 millions in all. In these very concrete forms--men and cash --she proved her devotion to the common cause, But let us look to the future and deal with the practical, What does Canada offer to Great Britain? It offers the career open to talent ~the field of opportunity to the young man of ambition and charact- or in the homeland It is to the young men here who feel eramped in thelr opportunities and are capable of dar- ing and endurance that I make a special appsal. They Will find that Canada offers to them, but in a higher degree, what It gave their forefathers, who made it, Great Opportunities, It presents in the swelling haope of its prosperity an immense chance to make money. Let the young man who is not afraid of his destiny go cut and make that money. If he likes he can come back and spend it in thé Old Country before his hair Is noticeably grey. As this is Dominion Day 1 speak as a visitor to the Capital, The Col- onlal subjects of the King can look with detachment on the strength and weaknesses of the English character. And it is well that youn should absord in this way the men from the outer marches. And it is well also that these, when 'they pitch their tent: KINGSTON POPULATION WILL SHOW" INCREASE in tabulating results. He expresses | Lord Beaverbrook's Advice to Young Englishmen Is to Settle in Canada among you, should never forget their provincial standpoint. You have founded upon native character the greatest Empire since the days of Rome. The veneration for precédent--the attachment to the home farm---the loyalty to a trade union--the love of order even in the middle of internal strife-- they are not enough. 3 Younger Sons. States before mow have perished from too much order, from immo- bility, from a slavish acceptance of regulation. If it was the elder sons who made Great Britain, it was the Younger sons who made the British Empire, They wore the men who were prepared to "live dangerously" in the political and economic sense. They put 'their trust in their own fate and fortune. All of you can- not be elder soms, and*it is to the younger sons that I appeal. For they are not bound by regulations and precedents, If they care to take the bolder course of individualism and adven- ture, they ean appeal to illustrous predecessors. The men who laid the foundations of the Empite were the adventurers Hawkins, Drake and Raleigh, Officially disowned by their Governments, they entered the New World. They thought as little of sacking an enemy town as of singe- Ing a king's beard. Their detractors declared thé to be little better than pirates. But 'Queen Elizabeth was not too proud to receive the wealth they poured into the public fund. Individual Effort, Who built the British Empire? The young men, the individualists. the adventurers. Who will main- tain it? Men of the same type and stock, That is the message of Do- minion Day to the youth of Great Britain. Canada is young; its po- tential wealth is unbounded, For both these reasons it believes in and depends . on individual effort and ferit, and will pay' any price to those who can supply the morale and the ability which it needs to de- velop it. Canada offers that spirit of indivi. dualism its highest chance of reali zation. I say to the young men of England, "Go out and take that chance." Turn your face from Eur. ope towards the West, Find your fulfilment in a new" world which is yet within the pale of the Empire. That Is the message of the Domjnion te the Old Counrtry--an Inspiration of hope, of promise to untrammelled energy. And the Old Country answers back: "When you have done your The assessment commissioner, Mr, | Small houses, E. Mooers, has concluded the work|them inhabitable, and others not in of appraising the values of buildings {sufficient and lands and recording 'other data|find tenants, and will spend the next two months |ally plgased work, here in England you will al. vays find a home." ' the conviction that the population for 1926 will show an increase. He finds that seventy per cent, of the vacant houses found in 1925 are now occupied. There are vacant houses abou the city, but the majority are with quite a few of up-to-date conditions to Mr, Mooers is gener- with the results obtained this year. \ ~, these are great qualities for a na- |i tion to possess. But in themselves |i LANDAU SEDAN ...... $1150.00 Delivered Kingston, including license, front bumper and spare tire The Central Garage, BROCK AND MONTREAL CHEVROLET, PONTIAC AND McLAUGHLIN-BUICK SALES v AND SERVICE tt i "Boots" Picture to Color © § r eR bod ig 1 Af pay. gy 35 Rl oD he Now doesn't BOOTS look pretty in a bathing suit ? on how well you color this picture, Ten Penitentiary Inmates Successful The schoolmaster at the pe téntiary is certainly warranted feeling proud over the success of . his pupils who wrote upon the At night, it journeys silvery a My house is but a little human : Snuggled hill-close; when I come at night ) steadfast Hght 2 ni- Returning home-----its White-streaming with an eager tem In | Gives welcome more than ome can ever gucss! 5 derness --Agnes Choste Wonkon, * ns nin, J recent examinations for entrance T into the high school. Ten of the It your heart sieht Habit you inmates, ranging from eighteen never lose self respect by wilh 2 to twenty-two , yéars of wrote, advised that nine passed succe fully. The result of those who tried the matriculation examina- tions are not yet announced. ---------------- MY HOUSE--AT NIGHT. In the dim hush of fearly moo I take the Jong road's trailing curve Down through the hollow---win upward winding To my low gray house on the h The daytime road is a 'wide thread of dustiness; "3 Historic Coldstreams Band in Canada age, and the authorities are the byways and hedges. Public Library ist a ---- . HAVE YOU READ ? The Uttermost Farthing--Lowndes. Procession of Life--Vachell, Uncontessed-9Grey. i Candle in the Hills--Hawk Grant, Bilver Spoon---Galsworthy. = Dragon in Shallow Waters--West, None-go-by---Sidgwick. 4 London Mixture--8idgwick, ' |Lone Lodge Mystery--Hawk. Plain Folks---W hitehouse. Ser A Man's Worth--Arthar, God 88~ nrise ding, il. x Dr. Waugh | 106 Wellington S¢. Phone 258. : APER HaNaina. PAINT- : Walnut and - . First class work, Prices FRED, YOUNG," Grataing |

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