Daily British Whig (1850), 3 Jun 1911, p. 11

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Address all letters as follows: - |and a white hat--the __~ WE DAILY BRITISH WRIG, SATURDAY. JUXE 3, 1011. THE PERSONALITY OF THE ; 5 By Arnold White in Express, London. | It is as difficult to write sbeGty an emperor as about a woman. If you {praise him you are 4 a syco- jphant. If you say what you really think jabout him ' you repel the sympathy iof those who have made up their | minds that he is either or devil, {Nine years have, passed since I had the opportunity of observing the Emperor {William at close quarters, and interesting once more to watch the |ome persomality of comtinental Europe {and to note the effect of time on the jgreat master of efficiency. At the gar- {den "party _ given by Lord Londes- thorough at St. Dunstan's Lodge, Re jgent's Park, English royalties and | Fnglish society assembled in goodly fnumbers to weet the eldest son: of the leldest child of Queen Victoria. : { As a man grows older his tempera- iment and his habits dint his' person- {ality too deeply to escape the obser- {vation of students of homan nature. | The dominant uote of - the German | kaiser's persomality is vitality--in- | tense vitality. He is never still. Mind land body are intensely alive. He is interested in everything and every- body. His gestires are continental. In conversation his right hand is in-- cessantly- in motion, playing an ac- | compamiment, a8 it were, to the rapid {How of genial speach with which he delights his old friends and the new acquaintances who reveal the delight that accompanies the honor of pre | sentation to the master of Europe. One feature alone is eryptic and still. His eyes, cold and pale blue, ex- hibit none of the exuberant vitality i which electrifies rather than impresses | the circle in which he is speaking. The jeyes are hard and steely. They be- long to a personality that has accom- J plished the hardest of all tasks--sell- comquest. Lines of pain circle the em- peror's eyes, as though he had strug- gled with vast difficulties and come quered them only with the sacrifice of much that makes life worth living. Once only did I observe the human- {ity of gentleness and affection--it was | when the empress touched his arm and {drew his majesty's attention to a {young lady for whom whe sought an lopportunily of presentation. The em- |peror smiled--a beautiful smile--the {hard steely eyes softened--not at the {girl, but at his wife. Here is one of {the secrets of the kaiser's. power. He is a family man, and the family, both in Germany and in Englapd, is in dan- per x "Nerves," said the kaiser the other day, "will win the next war." Al though he gestitulates far more than is usugl in our lethargic land, he gives the impression of possessing iron nerves. tntil the Japanese war reliev- ad Germany from the constant dread of Russian aggression, the ruler of Central Europe lived as the Roman emperors lived, in the centre of po- tential danger on every frontier, He never went to bed at night without the possibility of waking up in the morning to find that the frontier of fathertand had been crossed by a foe. {Such an experience, the constant sense {of jeopardy, has left indelible traces om the lines of his face. Un a recent visit to England the em- peror claimed with truth at the Guild hall that he had struggled, and strug glad successfully, for peace. He is um- der no illusion as' to the conditions of peace. The equilibrium of great forces, not the resolutions of impotent pacifi- cists, js the condition of peace. Reso- lutions in favor of silence postpone no thunderclap when the equilibrium of the a.mosphere is disturbed. And war, which (he war lord hates in his soul, no less than the Ponce societies of the warld, is to be averted only by inces- [Sant struggle to obtain the utmost ef- ficiency from an organized and armed nation. The German emperor has nev- er been crowned as German emperor. Yesterday, in his grey frock coat, with |a pink carnation in his buttonhole only white hat in a large assembly--he looked every inch an 'emperor. . Followed by Eng- lish royalities amd by Count Paul Metternich and the stafi of the Ger- man embassy, he moved from group to group, always debooair and inter ested, but always giving the indefin- able impression of distinétion. As he moved from the terrace to the lawn the Guards band was playing "Rule, Britannia," and ax the cadence floated over' the sunny English scene "Britons never, never will be slaves," carried ane's mind back to "Eighteen hundred and war time," when Napo- leon the upstart menaced Europe with the possible attainment of his ambi- tion--the mastery of the world. Under that white hat the well-groomed figure on the\lawn, gay and cheery among old friends and .new, the man who would be master of the world but for the British navy, was obviously at home. He was not acting a part. He felf that he was one of us, and insensi- bly gave pleasure to all and sundry because his own pleasure in the scene was 86 plainly sincere. There, agwin, is one the secrets of the emperor's power. He has the ca- pacity of imparting to others the force jof his immense nality. The crea: (tion of modern Germany is the result iof blood and sweat, but is is alse the {result of a high spinitual quality in Germany's ruler. a garden party [the religious character any guest, hie qua eminent, is usually 5 negligi- ! bl¢ quality, but never for ome second did the man in the white hat forget [that he was the Lord's ancinted, and {that he owed to the God of his fathers (an account for the deeds he has done in the flesh. . Colonial _premierd were present in %e, ralers of vast and almost emp- {ty territories, won by the sacrifices of {British sailors amd soldiers when {stauding between would-be masters of the world and the attainment of their ambitions. The company was a micro- cosm of the British jut ts disappear under the exigen- €¥s ol our party system. 1 The emperor himself has told us that many of his people do not love us, but no soversigy could aver have work- - «i mare thoroughly as a mission of Feace the it was IN THE WHTE HAT the 'suspicions of his own @od faith The English public is proud of him, because he is hall an Englishman, and still more because ke is every inch a man. a But underneath the surface of the gay scene at St) Dunstan's Lodge | could not help ing of the two brave English natul officers who are suffering the rigors'of piso puta in Gérman fortresses. Trench and Bran don were caught fairly and punished justly for serving their country as many Germans in buy 'a¥e werving their fatherland to-day. Would not the imperial clemency of thé kaiser be gratefully received by the British na- tion if his majesty "seized this oppor- tunity of forgiving Trench and Bran- don, as English clemency forgave the German officer at Portsmouth ? In that event Englishmen would cry "Hoch der kaiser I" us heartily | as any German. FROM THE COUNTRYSIDE. Notes From Perth, Perth, June 1.--The body of How- ard, son of John Strong, aged five years, drowned in the Tay River here, Monday, was interred 'in Elmwood cemetery, yesterday: Miss Laura Rose, of Guelph, will be the delegate to the public meeting here, June 5th, under the auspices of the Women's 'lnstitute. Miss Maud Berlangette, has gone to Toronto to assist her brother in his drug store, ' Junetown Jottings. Junetown, June 1.--Mr. and Mrs, T. Franklin and Master Taylor are spend- ing a few days at Rockport. W. B. Warren, Lansdowne, passed through here on Tuesday with his portable sawing outfit em route to Yonge Mills. Miss Myrtle Purvis passed suc- cessfully through her recent operation at Brockville general hospital. Mr. and Mrs. James S. Purvis spent Mon- day at Brockville, Mrs. M. Scott and Miss Annie Scott spent last week with friends hére. Ross Purvis spent Thursday in Brockville. Miss Arley Purvis is the guest of her sister, Mrs. Claude Purvis, Lyn. Mr. and Mrs. J. Edgley, Lake street, spent Sunday with their sister, Mrs. G. Weston. Berries and fruits of all kinds pro mise an excellent crop in this sec- tion. Lansdowne Boy Killed. Lansdowne, June l.-~Word was re ceived here to-day of a terrible acei deat at Warburton in which Percy Steacy, eldest son of Robert Steqcy, lost his life. He was on the roller when the horse took fright and threw him off and crushed him under the roller. He was in his fifteenth year, and a bright promising lad. Miss Chattie Cross and Mrs. Charles Fredenburg are spending a short time at Rockport. Rev. Pr. tawa, arrived this afterngon to at- ted the funeral of his nephew. On Monday afterncog, May 25th, Miss Rose, of Guelph Agricuivural Col- lege, addressed the Lansdowne Wo- men's Institute, Mrs. Ruddick, snd daughter, of Brockville, spent a few days with her cousin, Mrs. E eg. Warren. The remains of the late Arnold McCready, aged two years and six months, only child of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur McCready, were placed in the vault here, ou Taesday after noon. Mrs. Bert. Wood, Toledo, is spending a few days with her father, William McConnell. Dr. Meikle is boarding at Thomas Hunt's, Ivy Lea. Long Point Locals. Long Point, May 30.--Mra John Plunkett and William Plunkett attend- 'ed the funeral of their cousin, James (iamhlle, on Saturday last. John Moor- head visited his mother, who wa# very ill, at Lansdowne, on Wednesday. An- Sunday at Arthur Slack's. A few from this section attended the celebration at Jones' Falls, on Victoria Day. Mr. and Mrs. Darwin' Cross, of Lagsdowne spent Sugday at Mrs. Burns'. James Townsend, fishery overseer, has pur: chased a motor bolat. Miss Ewing, Lyndhurst, visited Miss Pearl Shook, on Sunday. Miss Madeline O'Connor, visited in Delta last Thursday. The baseball club played)its first game on Wednesday at Lyndhurst. The = result was in favor of the Lyndhurst team. W. Peck, of Gananoque, made a busi- ness trip through here, on Friday. Charles 0'Conmor went to Delta last week for instructions regarding . his work as cemsus enumerator. Miss Jessie Webster and brother, of Sweet's Corners, visited Miss Florence Town- fered last Sunday. Bunker's Hill News. Bunker's Hill, May 30.--Mrs. George Ba is around again. George Tin- nerman, Je., has been quite ill. with measles. Mr. and Mrs. Gowdy held service here Sunday. A large crowd was in attendance. George Babeock and family are leaving the mines Wed- nesday on account of his wife's ill health, All are sokry to see them leave as they were people for the hoarding house. James: Kelly, Jr. will take the ing house after Wednesday. Miss Storms has left the mines and intends to go to Wat ertown, N.Y., in a week or so. ' Visi- tors: Mr. and Mrs. Allen Snider and son, William, at A. Leeman's; F. Mar- tin, at S. Leeman's; Frandes Babcock stayed over Sunday at Verona: Mr. and Mrs. George Bauder, at A. Hop pin's; Mr. Pero, at George Tinperman, Sr's.; Mrs. Jerry Babeock, st J. W Babeock's: Mr. and Mrs. Foaerick Smith, Sydesham, at A. nabs; Archibald Th , at J. Wilson's ; Maggie Tallen and _Frands Babcock, at George Tinnernsan, Jr's; J. W. Babcock, at Oats Flats, P. Leeman, at Fdward Alberson's; Miss Tena Snider, at B. Hoppin's. 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For its flavor is surpassing. You have never found a lager_so tempting, yet so wholesome, as this deliciously mild lager Some of the best Bavarian beers equal London Lager's rare quality. But they are seldom ex- ported; and they are expensive. This newest Labatt triumph is not expensive. Yetitsingredi- ents are the very choicest; and it is brewed with utmost care for absolute purity. London Lager sharpens appetite --makes your food taste better. Greatly assists digestion. Benefits thé blood. And, on a hot and sultry day, London Lager refreshes you like a cool breeze. You'll surely appreciateit. And it will do you much good. London Lager is ideal at dinner --stimulates tired appetite; adds savor to meat: allays thirst. Quit imported lagers, not nearly so fine and twice as costly. Just try it and judge. Order it next time it's fine! , --from -all usual dealers in beverages or direct from John Labatt, of London, Canada. is. : '

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