{ LR : - pitish ~ KINGSTON, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, JANUARY 14 aily SECOND. PART hie a = PAGES 9 TO 11. a : Caan pre" 5 i r me \ -- Em---- YEAR 78-NO. 11. . " discriminziion, must cease. Suppose | contingency 1 have suggested. It is on admiralty proposed something of the | * : " . ike that Japanese were to say © "H you the cards that the United States and |sort. Their suggestion was that there UEEN 0 d f 1 he Pacific admit German immigrants, vou must | Japan may fight, They are very un- [should be four "'fleet units" in the Pa- v ; i admit Japanese immigrants. Hf you | easy neighbors and in any event a war |cific, Canada, Australia ard New Zea- 4 ; permit Russians to take up land 'You lis jossible. Should it take place our|land providing one 'each, and the Un- PRAISES PE-RU-N By CAPTAIN FRED ERICK OC, HAMILTON, must permit Japanese to take up | position would be one of great deli- [ited Kingdom the fcurt'. Thus there . * - : land." Would ~mot. that be werious ? | cyey. I put aside the suggestion that| would be four big battle cruisers, each | O or OO Suppose we yielded. Great Britain has | ghe- Anglo-Japanese "Alliance would [a ship of about 15,000 tons, armed sitered instead of be Bk sent out 8&5 mwmuy as $00,000 emi- | oblige Great Britain to side with Ja- [with eight bandh, of inh gos; ined that the United grants mm ope year. Japan has = nin such an event; the alliance [and these could keep together as'a rier nterests on the larger population, a less fertile comm pan not apply to such a conti oy. | battle squadron able to fire thirty- the Facifi try, und is far less wealthy. Suppose | Still the situation would hg two 124nch or 13.5iuch gums on a bh empire three she sent out 500.000 » ye and that ately 'awkward, for Great Britain is |broadside; while in addition there of 100.000 of those came to Canada, un- | on friendly terms with Japan, But we | would be a dozen fast cruisers and two a= der such terms of free ingress. Where Canadians, and the %ustrali and dozen or so torpedo crafts for other i id our white sopuldtion of British New Zealanders, ' being whi men, duties. Canada woul not agree to put- fieross if, such as the Atlantic « olumbia be at the end of a Uecade ? would sympathize intensely with the [ting her strength in the Pacific, and so has seen, Alriady in vears it has | MORI ) ; Supposs that Japan ry to quasi United States. Moreover, we in Cab: the coming. } acific fleet will have only been the seen of efi : RY. great | slands, such » ritish with the British Fmpire. It would be ds : ha | three ttle-cruisers. it may be the scene of other «| North B ete. To rv for Roy to consider the ada might axperience: a special danger. | Despite this decision, I hold that y | : . ha pas a, " | Japan might capture the Philippines ! : : of the nations which front be Paci arding of her Paéific coast-line Such Pp it and: at tan att Canada should do some effective are white men, and some of th slumbia, war might open umder any one of and Hawaii anc. a rs sie On jon the Pacific. By 1915, w the yellow men. Some of these ahitants for 'the followmg sets of vircumstanees the American on. he - WAS | Anglo-Japanese alliance terminates, may clash. It may be : aft together. There | (1) The British Empire might have attacking Port 4 ne she aPpropria: {the three British dominions snd the decile by foree of arms who : s next white sea-daring or fish seombled in the Pacific in advance, a ted the Elliott Islands some few miles | eed i . in Hong Kong and master of the Pacific. 1 popmlat ihe Japanese Having fleet more powerful than the Japa- | Way which belongs to. China, and qingapore, should #ave in the Pa: whith is about Yo be of the fishing in nese --{ transformed them inte a flying base; | so 500 many powerful armoured ships great ovenls, aid br military forees consist {2} The empire might have in the Pa- that is, her main fleet remained at| as our sailors tell us are NeCessary. Y corpe of militia. | ifie a fleet of sents strength but infer anor in the harbor these islands [4 is more 'our interest than Great orces of our. own, or 1 that of Japan; and might have afforded, while Joule Watched . the | Britain's. I agree that "the force kip of slight fight- | : { we raise must be ours, must be man- 1st buen pliced on the : Ed | 25d by ue an administrative sense, | and if possible must be m us. erhaps 4.500.000 peo x + But there is one thing that is Ir. bution of this n } tAll the British armoured ships on nfavorablie we | i pre ; [the Pacific must constitute one fleet, eked, It is grouped : {must always keep together, must sail 3.000 'miles of in| eS . ; G { together, drill "together, fight to- : bere is no central | a ? 3 a ; Ss jgether. Canadian and New: Zea- mags of papulation to furnish a re ood : § » lander and Australian and Eng serve, and 'the railkay system is sol : : NT : s {lishman must form part of one w k ' { homogeneous, indissoluble Pacific fleet. i | Many people have been misled by the on command of the sen. When | | wording of the admiralty proposals at ord Kit ™ sie has been | 3 el : : the defence conference into thinking varcied the he Commonwealth | : : RY | that each fleet unit would go off and i Coast Defence O | The Paciie Js the wurld's OCean. Mighty Bations extending shores Already trade is-varvied upon its this trade will inorease enormous. The teade | thtg. 4 way be'ths ticns of human beings let refine 8 to make inter-state coms Heal on dependent in some re will have u militia wrmy of from 50.- fight in its own corner--one armoured oy te 100 060 v. Her people ave | {eruiser with its light cruisers by it- Mopting universal trainin It is . . {self on our coast, another such unit ett uy Unit of one 1 N T 3 a 3 {on another coast, and so on. Any | battle cr i ¥ isuch plan would be pure idicey. An | EPR { ne tarpedo boat de enemy with inferior foree could crush . NY toi a . tani? 3 oh : that benefits digestion *"TIimproved under the treatment, bul Hoyer: a wine 7 TH ST \ 5 FENCE AS 3 " ;. | each such "unit" in detail. THY units A" remedy & Bp 4 te i fiom AN UP-TO-DATE BATTERY. COAST DEFENCE AS IT SHOULD BE, must provide ong mid-ocean Beet. , strengthens the nerves, as soon us I stopped taking the medi- nder the on the way to the Pacific a re'eniorc- { Russians in Port "Arthur. In attack-| Moreover, it will be of little use for The nerve centers requife nutrition. | cine, I got bad again, v militia ing fleet powerful enough to restore | ing thé American coast, Japan might the several ships provided by the four If the digestion is impaired, the nerve | "I took the medicine for two yeors, C.F HAMILTON » 25,000 men. equality be tempted to seize some of the nu- British communities concerned to | centers become anemic, and indigestion | then I got sick again and gave up all Ta we adopting uriiversal (3) The empire might have on the | merous = islands or harbors on our cruise together if their training is not | 1s the result, hopes of getting cured. Cangda is a Pacific power least, | may setting wp a naval spot no force at all worth mentioning, | British Columbia coast. It would he | identical. They should be standard- ree a re ieee So "Isaw a testimonial of a man whoos she has a frontage on 1 Paey for fo « battle crmser and some but might dispatch to the Pacific a | our duty to observe our obligations | ied. The ships should be built on Peruna is not a nervine nor & 4 | case was similar to mine being cured by Thus she is conesrned in. the ire : ' fleet of adequate strength as neutrals and forbid any such act [the sams plans. The guns should stimulant. It benefits the nerves by | Peruna, so I thought I would give it a that ocean and of the events upon | eee three } he iso (4) The empire might bo weaker | jon. But how could we prevent it if be Sf the gate St The signaling beaefiting digestion. fj it. | late wx, islands. ote . then Japan: ahd ave no prospect of | 'w d Bo RAV ih , + | shou of the same style. "he . "I Broo bottl baie » There 1% ena governing fact which | meratal, exent tish Empire Bra Jupan ang A Hd 2 lity Yet had ba oe J ary Rp standard of discipline and efficiency JPoruna frees the stomach of gatarrhal | or aed 3 Notions aoe snd oa is very strange for Rritishers to tak the t is fairly plain that | In the first case there would be wo | our coasts would be to inflici a dead. [Should be the same. The tactics | tongestions and normal digestion is the totfieasnd an shat re be re av into account. We have i to stralia und New Zealand, it is a war, for Japan would not risk it, and [ly wrong on the United States, a |°hould be identical. Perhaps it is| vesult. tae rte tot tbe : / 3 » right for each dominion to own its In other words, Peruna goes to the I have gained in strength et x small protectad | the idea bred into our very df matter of life and death to h } na : : . : fe and death to have the we do. nof™ntend to adopt an sgres- | wrong which. they would be justified in 8 . that the British fleot, the royal navy foommand of the soa in friendly hands; dye attitude towards her. In the | bitterly resenting. A torpedo service ships, to bay the officers and crews | bottom of the whole difficulty, when [feel like a different pecson. | bes hi h is maintained hy the, United amd shat to Bri 1 Columbia, ie, to fourth case, there probably would be [on our coast might conceivably be a 8 one Fl Soros olitical the disagreeable symptoms disappear. |} lieve Peruna is ail thet Is claimed xh vy om, is J breme upon the orean. | €; whe, it ales is» matter of high no war, for we would not fight, unless | enough to turn the seals in favoe of th o oy = ihe: Ta siuelst the Mzs. J.C. Jamison, 61 Marchantstivet, § x. ha was - het tha culty oc y ve wrtance. All three fly. the same goaded to desperation. What about lleaviag us alone. : : Susan He one details of adminis-| wwassonwille, Cal, writes: 1 thelial Wi ger oNERL of was the Atlantic [flag, own the same voveraign,. form 'fhe second and third cases ? I_bave argued that const defence for | T24OR dtsell, but tne training of | "uy yyy troubled with my stomach for | © OTVINGS, Such as coal tar prepaske wcenn. But Ep pe GAS EN Ppart of the same empire, und must fet ns sapposs the third case to beth Pacific means, (1): the maintaining | LO a# a war-force must be identical six years. I tried many Kinds of medi- | HOD 87e doing & great deal of harm. years § remarkable © 0 had Laken fhave the some friends. That hardly {one A fleet arting from British Jof a torpedo "00. Jo ® for all. In particular, their officers - b { Sleep medicines and headache powders Place and today the royal navy | ox ' ALY fom. A fleet sta g s 1 service, for actual comst- | must associate. much together, must be| SIRS; 8lso was treated by three doctors, | rt' : + ex es cit. In addition to these Id take two mouths dial service; (2) th i te : i gether, m are all alike, ~hoart depressants, an a very small foree un the Pacific | fhice snot ; : 3 waters wou : 7.1) the presence "in. the | trained side by side, must have the "They said that I had nervous dys- | shouid not be used. 7 while Other: powers havo very power | thin ory Oe map, there i some | ooh Hong Keng, which we may take | whole Pacific ocean of British fleet | same general 'method of thinking of | Pepeis. Twas puton a liquid diet for oe ful forees, Thos Cunade, ng to | NE Ms 10 be considera ou the Pa- |, typical British port in the Paci [strong enough to wage a 'containing war-problems . the fave that thors may he wartareon | oo Ar # the wight of the British 'go Japan would have that two |campaign against a possible enemy. % rg . i 2 the Puoifie, mist contemplate hae | Empire ms a whole. That fsaanother | £0 GT Chick to roam the ocean. | That midioosan fleet does' not need to Fis 4 T jhe ousidemtion warfare feom the standpoint of io] 0X Of tying ee -- gs H it | Suppose she were to utiliee it in dis be on our coasts to protect them; it which 1 Ten ----nl to fits in. Xi ag teh = dvb y 5 118 siprame on the Pacilie all three ave | % "flag! ransporis loaded | will be re i hd . kd gS country which eonesivably' micht fot |, Austealin 'and New Zealand ob. | Patching a fleet. of transpo - 3 better for us to have it far} po "ceveral British communities éo- be able to ty . \ ew Jonland ab- {ith troops to British Columbia; such [from them. There is a third condition : : hud : Orly on ane overpowering a, Canada. fairly" 80. The IT ps . ; : ; : : operated in maintaining one hig Pa: t. » Labadla at by : 0 | & floes could reach our shores in uf-fto which 1 shall refer very briefly. A cific fleet, the difficulty would he . Bavy Is the y r fs p. A % , r 'Orv . i 3 : ' 3 Let us swvay the important' pow. 1904 © 3 i ARaE a ee 1 | teen days and at present could land very few shore points need some forti- solved, fur officers could pass from | hich bodes the Pacil a it sweat Britain h the Pa- |. soldiers at any point on our coast | fication. Esquimalt alveady has the i L ot8 which hortlee the Pacific. A this age gic powerful battle force [11 S0ICIETS Bt an f the guns fixed defence Thi ry coastal to mid-ocean work and back I an article Bh Coast Defence let ud tor to that of Rus prob . outside of the zange ol tw J0ms "m ru pes » ich are Hobessaly. . ht agaip as convenience served. survey tien fighting alone. bis superior to that of Japan Fo Esquimalt. gh . necessary to mount A few, n I suggest thisischeme: That all (1) Japan is a very powerful coun day she hal only: three cr feat. arte] Suppose, however, the second case to [very fow, guns to defend - Victoria, | {he officers of the imperial navy bel try. Nhe has én army organised <n y Eos Nai Wher Ale i x a Nas { be ours. Suppose that in the Pacific Vancouver and Prince Rupert; it is as- carried on one list, the United King- the German model and could put 1, Zealand hat bak hh Be Tattle OW | there was a British fleet, not as pow- | tonishing how few are the shore guns | dom, Canada. Australia, New Zea uo exenliont soldiers into the Great Bitar weil ee Hu. | orful as the Japanese Li but still eally Negus to keep ships from en- | land and South Africa each contribu- Ces - 3 a8 § ire Wn yo igri RL A ¢ r ol 0 things inter- | termg 3 I . ing i ery aha hun a Jorge num | pry" Wl Dew oct of Three "Dread {AONE enough. to. make things int | tering J aatusne that Cannda wishes | mg She sumber of, affioses requires for er of merchant ship which she oudhis" amd abot ton Tit "" lesting for ite In such an event the shall assume that Canada wishes | the ships which she owns; then let ehould use ins transports if she wished ut : Sow boy Nn HEL cruisers | np itish fleet" would play a waiting | to provide her own coast defence on | these ships be supplied - by officers to send armies ot erseay. She has af" a MEE rps oma ny game; could lie on the ball, as the | the Pacific. How are we to fit our ar- {from the combined list irrespective of powerful fleet which in 1001 appar-| (8) Russia is in the backgrowmd at | football player would SAV: could wage | rangements into the condition 1 have | their origin, Thus Canada would ently will nsist of two Drepdnonght pre ent. Her fleot has been destroyed, ja contamiing or delaying campaign, as' described ' : = have a certain number of ships and and eleven pro Dreadnought battle | 3 ou ¥ one sea port on the Pas | bo sirategist would phrase it. The The torpedo flotilla is comparatively | would have them officered by English. ships, and thirteen armoured cruisers, | cif ! that is bampered in winter | 3 nese fleet would be very unlikely [an casy matter, though there are |men, Canadians, Australians Afrikan- you will ot be satisfied with any but Redpath. Hor forees i; 5 1 : blanketed | ™ oats ; ' i Pr or furers 'are all in-hand and con by ive, an in addition. is blanketed |'o "od un mob of helpless transports | some complications. We can buy or | ders and New Zealanders indifferently, Dainty Tei Tables . eetitrated, and she 1 no interests phy the Japanese lands, which so lie! CoN Chae» British fleet was mov- | build the ships, train the men, em- | just as in England they do not care PARIS LUMPS © ars always served witli outside of the Pacifie, She has a very fas to out it off from noes to the too about. Thus even an inferior Bri- [ploy the officers, and in general man- | whether the commander of a giver LUMPS to be had in RED Ska tert anil abi n Paeid While R ful 0 A i " : ; § dust proof cartons, and by the pound, - a pH ey ta nent, Opes ace hike Russia is powerfu | tish float able to keep the sea would {age it as oul own force. There is {fleet is an Irishman, a Scotsman --or > : iy ie Pon 2 he Lotte Biates hive thew jon had, we may fur the present omit | 5 im i rad long | this e hicatfon--th k English i invasion off our coasts as long this complication--thut torpedo .work ; an Englishman. During the period of a ) The Canada Sugar Refining Co., MONTREAL, CANADA Limited | ware Established in 1854 by John Redpath toe ep nt 50 YEARS EXPERIENCE ¥ EXTRA GRANULATED SUGAR IS ABSOLUTELY PURE The fiist and great essential of a food product, is Purity ; the Purity and Quality of our Extra Granulated have never been questioned. Once make a comparison with other Sugars and {as At remained undefeated. Thus we | should have our coast defence achieved { for us on the blue water, perhaps by a fleet working from Hong Kong, onthe | Lotter: wide of the ocean. We might | never see the ships, and vet they would | {be protecting us, es « ' Suppose: that while the British fleet 3 3 . pa p---- was keeping the Japanese from send- pt $9 -- ITT ing an army aeross, Japanese eruisers Pacifie should pool their issues, Lwere to come across and molest our : y their risks and to some extent | coasts. As things are now they could ' ¥ 5 their expenditures. It iw that 4 ] e i should go in for a Usited Imperial continental coasting on the Pacific, states of Califarin. (recon ROOM ON COAST WHICH TELLS THE APPROACH OF LS AND FROM WHERE THE FIRING 1S DIRECTED. Ber fon our Bist of paritine seach bors. "from ihe mainland, and separate Vie- {da & great deal of mischief. They Hoult cause nur shipping trade on the {oonst of British Columbia to cease. They could cut Vancouver Island off { toris, the capital of the province, tirom the bulk of the territory which {ik administers. They 'could levy con tributions from Victoria and Vanco They could, in shart, humiliate annoy us extremely. Suppose, { however, that we had on our coast a {number of torpedo boat destroyers. and some submarines. The matter at once would asstime a new phase, for no hostile criiser would venture with out remarkably good reason into the 'narrow and intricate waters which se that a man has ANOTHER VIEW OF "UP-T O-DPATE COAST DEFENCE." . is young men's work: it is so arduous little business on a their stay on a Canadian ship all the officers, whatever their origin, would be employed be the Cal dar Naval Service department. Thas we navy which should combine standard ization of traming, especially for off cers, with autonomy of administra: tion and political control; that this United Imperial navy, to which ail conosrned would contribute ships ged men, should find a central, mid -ooey British coastline should have 148 tillas. I advgeate coast defence by keeping all edemios away from our Coasts. 1 start from a rigid cussion of purely Canadian jes and hy a perfectly logical process find myself advocating a moti, "Bach for all and all for each fleet, which could keep sen | safe for all; and that in addition cach | protective sheathing of torpeds flo. ! -Money-Bark Guarantee Give Robin Hogd Fix are not wethfled with 1® wo far trials f 5 ashingtan: also Hawai, the Dhilip That is the situstive on the Pacific, parate Vatcouver Island from the |» - 4 ar trials, Mf 3 pines and Sime smallee istands, They {1 propose sat to discos every possible mainland, abounding as they do in in- i they ad d i ! | should have our leaders standardized. Loaned Him an Eye, oe a a * have EE erganimd on danger, Bat only two possible dun lets; fiovds, passages and other mo: ] and in addition the: Ganadian-who-sh+! Prank Vanek, a miniag man of th give You Back your ~ the: Sehion Prineiple without gers. Gae is & war between Japan graphical eccentricities which render the service would have a chance Cripple Creek district, Colorado, prov. | J fairer) Will you try 129 and so withowt the power oi and the Pritish Empice. The other js them s happy bunting ground for the reach high rank; whereas, il we in: od how strong western generosity = i J expansion; BLO of these our standing in a war betwesn Japan | smbusoades of the torpedo craft. Thus : . S sist on keeping our force separais .when he took out one of his eves and pr = o OW are be fast the: Umted States. the provision of a torpedo s A otect | rromotion will be very slow TO pt a Vio and and the Paes | ay present Sapatiose anc the Reitish Shote service would Pacific man ean expect to rise to a very high and newspaper man, who had east ol thed pitoin are. not onl: an good 'terms, | AWAY from our coasts: unless and un preve command. is own optics, LRtltin of US-4) "pn allies. The Riliauon, however, Hl he bad a reason for coming so Australia, ¥ That is my al as regards Both men wear fale eft wes, Vil BE A te |g; i M15 and nay no ein] ax to make him willing : : " - jeonst defence on the Pacific. It Wo ler's eye got frost-bitten ou Thursday. {EB etd : um Cn bihat Goo, Fapan 1 pp * ' } ed that the British communities of the wg Hd, be tried to thaw it put with Lf AN, Hr Serve os rams will be : warm water it exploded. Unable to] in the position pe to seid their § a x 3, : , " i § 1a tw fo : powers. which yay or | \ Hore eof obtain another false eye in the wining sire $e 4 "gp : ny . ' . Ask Your Doctor samp, be ny saved further diseomf- dR Wha | + 2 h i } on . : " or ey ture when hiv friend proceeded to take turned it over to the former. Untsl anche ns arrives Vanock will wear an one happened to | laid awab. have "What a grand old world this really would be if éverybody setually he Hovet that honesty is the best policy 8 it! SE of cand comfort is ob Fe, if ee ourhin, iwen- discuss er, av: oasis | 8 ' t Ii the rer, ne i 0} ~~ 1 t he thinks of the 'glass eye out of his own head and