Daily British Whig (1850), 5 Feb 1912, p. 7

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MEESTER Si PIADE iN CanADA E.W.GILLETT CO.LTD "ROYAL ICE CREAM PARLOR Best place for all kinds of quick lunches and hot drinks Choevlates and candy of kinds kept in stock M, PAFPAS & CO, 184 Priscess Street. all Dt. ae Van's Female Pills 'seliable French ragulator ; never faile, These pile are exceedingly powerful in roRulating ] Heastative portion of the female system. Refuse all cheap Smitaions a do Vat's Me id mt . alec V a Bell Prue = Cou. Bt. Cathar Ome, For sale at Mahood's Drug Store. Thomas Copley PHONE 987. Drop a card to 4 Pine Street, wed, wanting anythin one In e r - t Hn rims given on all kinds of repairs an new wor also Hardwood Floors of all kinds. All orders will receive prompt attention Shop 4% Queen Street -- aay" : RDWOOD, HEST MAPLE at FHERABISNE, DRURY'S, COAL AND WOOD YARD, "Phone 413, 205 Wellington Si, French Howitis @ith great success ures blood sev tad legs sores dischargeste thers xiweakness ost vigor Rv talfares draina losses te, Either No.at doug sti ar M+ 1 8] from Frugera & (a. 00 Heckman 5 {os UlLy. or Loman laos Co. Led. Toronte. ha louht No. ory 1. send self addr rssed rnvelape fon free honk to The Lo Cleve Mad Cn Hayerstock Reb Hamp stead, | ondon, Bag. Try newDrugée Tasteless) Forme of TROraph ®, «ary to take safe. 'acting core COWAN'S PERFECTION COCOA "Great for Breakfast." A day started on Cowan's 'Cocoa isa day with a clear head and a steady nerve-- a day full of snap and life. Cocoa nourishes the body. It is rich in food value and easy to digest. 3 ( DO YOU vse oOwWAN'S OQCOA? BARGAINS + Men's Tan Calf Bluch. Dotible sole hoot $5.00 Reduced to - - . $345 Ammann Mons Felt Boots felt sole $2 reduced 0 $145 All Felt Boots. and i Slippers: - Men's, Wom- en's, Misses', and Child- tren's <All Reduced | Women's and * Child- ren's Sg. = ue | You Can Make Short Work of a Cold LINSEED AND TT a ---- THE COUNTRY. 1S CREATING WORLD-WIDE ATTENTION. Interesting Address Was Delivered by KR. D. Shimidzy Regarding the Different Problemis----G reat Oppor- tunity for Christian Church, the following very interesting dress on Ching was delivered of the Christian at Portsmouth evening, by KR. D, ath bee we kn lass Sllmid- re members leas or society sunday 20 bing, of to-day, » the focus vorid-nide attention not because of hier receut appearance in newspapers, onder the headings printed with big kitets, but beeauss she is really 'u ig question in the Far East. Many ohsirvers have been lookibg on Chink ts a "sleeping elephant," but the uative people have been proud of call ing her un "sleeping lion." Whethe China is an elephant or a Hon only time will tell, and my present paper will tell you something of China in the past, poict out how the revoln- tionary movement has come to take place, and also. give you some idea of the actual social conditions in that land, : The Chinese race, which: is general: ly called *"Hoavg-ho" in tne native language, . declared she independence against the Pekin government, in the year 4609, of the foundation of that empire. 'Ibe culeulation "of this era is very doubtidl, and so open to cri- ticisn. Bit no scholar has so tar discovered amy authentic historieal materials hy which the Cltaese ers enn' be otherwise counted. in this way we ave compelled to pre-supposy that the calulauion is * provisionally trie in so far 8s it is put in the Chinese chronicle. But you must re- member 'this : ' 'That however doubt ful we maybe about the exact urith- wetical ealovlation of the era, therg » no room for doubting that more than four thousand years have passed chendy since the Hosbg vate came to Central China. The Hoang race oh f THE DAILY BRITISH raed by the Chinese But In lute Erode a casnuge took place, In Lis year 1209 A the 'Ulanese sovere.gn SOMLE Wis lust ocoupied by forcgn wvaders gl came trom Mouguas. And tne han dynasty lasted = oul, eighty seven pairs and in 1368 tue isise of Boung cuce could ecune to power agsin. [hus the foundation of the Minh dynasty was laid. down wy the Chimese, but unfortunaiel, shks come Lo an end in 1643 AD, in the vear 1644 the Uhinese throne: wr- revered for the second awe torcign race, aad from the jeer weary Chigamon was Lo raise toe well-known cue wack of his head "ts the f the 'absolate alliasce to the foreign invades, |. This is the Lirst. s¢tibe- ment of the Matchu colors ia Clana shom the revolutionists are now otlighbg hy sending them five aud iron, ge. there is no doult that the Manchu rulers used the natives very badly: it is generally acknowledged that © for the retrogression of the' Chinese civ- ilization and the disintegration of the national spirit, the Manchus are, iu the greatest "degree, responsible, They faileu in both home rule and diploma- ey. It was during the last three cen- buries, that the decadence of the Uhi- ese nation became extraordinarily re- lo «un follow ing compeilest at Lee were occupied by foreign powers. It is A sort of wonder that the Chinese could stand the Manchu dynasty for over two hundred and sixty years. I we compare the population of the Chi: nese, with that of the Manchu, we find that the proportion of the former to the latter, canpot bé 'less than three hundred to one. The Chinese exceed not only in number, but als, in intel- legt. Perhaps, the latter half of tha statement, when predicated of an in- dividual, will not be true: but i it is predicated of each race collectively, it holds good. In the history of China you will find that all the remarkable artists, philosophers, statésmen und such-like came from the Chinese race, t not from the Manchu. "I'he Mun- chu race {rom its beginning to our day never produced a single character ol intellectual type. Of course, there ap. peared among the Manchus a few min: was hot native to the land of China; it wigrated from another place the valleys of the Hoavg-ho (Yellow River) over four thousand years ago. The original home of the race id nut well known. but it' may he safely on. serted thibt this race had inhabited somewhere near the Kuem lnen because a pieat many Chinese legends and myths refer to thos: mountains. Irovious to the migration of the race to Uhina' the valleys of the Houng-ho hatl been already occupied by another tribe; but this tribe scoms to have given -gway to the pew- comers. The southern part of China had been inhabited by another tribe which tribe still survives, keeping to theis own traditiors and manners. And the northern part had sheen also settled by a warlike tribe which seems to have been far more power ful than the southern tribe, Toe Hoang race which took possession of the central part of Clima wes fro guently attacked by both the north- ern and the southern tribes, but fin- alle it gained, the upper hand oyer both sides. The loader of the Chin. eo race is genevally known by the name fen-vang; but this name seoms to me to have besn not an individual but a collective name applied to the whole race. (This. is my own' su- position from the very meaning of that word). After the death of this leader the name, Kwong-dai was ded- ieated him, and the Chinese people coll him by the later name. - This loader, Kwong«lai, is suppesed to be the ancestor of the Chinese race, and the revolutionists olaim lo restore the inherited power of the descend: ants from Kwong-dai, which power has been so long kept down by the outsiders. Now Jet us see how the power of Kwong-dai's deseendants game to svrrender to the outsiders... The death of Kwong-dai was followed Viv a serine of wars and as a matier of course notion kd rise against nation and Finrdom neainst kingdom: the power of the Chinesa race an a whole, how- ever, was never transmitted' to a fereign race; Chine wns always gov- Suden Changes Many Cals And Colds Are the Starting Polat of Serious Diseases. by Using or generals to northern districts of China," imder the "that [tated in the Pelin court until her re} mountuius before it came to China, !Waordinary who trampled down the hoofs of horses. These are the repre sentative characters of the race, perhaps, witn an addition of questionable dowager who die- vent death. She wai a lady of personality, very like Mary Stuart. | Undet such circumstances, it is ne uncommon thing that a sudden cvent will take place. The political atmos. phere in Unina has been very threatens ing for the last twenty years, China was reported to have begun awake, she has sent 'out a great many students Lo foreign counties, to get something from abroad, in Tokio, seven thousand Chincse stu- ex much few years ago. went back home, they were utterly dis. many of them joined the secret ponti- cal urganization, the purpose of which was to upset the Pekin goverament vy aby moavs whatever. 'Ihe secret move: ment was confirmed by the racial feel ings, which are very strong among the Ulunese people, who are 'proud to say that they are the direct descendants of Kwong-dai. 'Ihus, the relations of the rulers to the ruled became wore and more bitter. Un the other hand, the sovereign power of the Manchu teu down to its very lowest, chiefly be- cause of the corruption of the our life in Pekin, of which latter-day Chinese Mary Stuart is typical. In the meantime the secret organization took advantage of this situation, and mal: ly it declared the independenee of Chi- na hy the name of the ancestor KRwong-dai. Therefore, is can be said that Chinese revolution is not a mere selfish anarchical movement, but the restoration of the power on the part of the native race. This is the his torical interpretation uf the present Chinese movement, Next, let me consider, Ly calling to mind the actual condition of euuca- tiop in Ching, whether or no the re public which has been provisionally s- tablished in the south 1s fit for that Innd. "First of all, 1 should like to call your attention to the conservativ tendency of the Chinese mind. No oth- er nation will be more conservative than thy Chinese; it is a well-known characteristic of the Chinese mind, to keep to its own traditions and his tory. A new order of things seems to them to be bitterly bostile. In cus toms, manners and literature they faithfully observe the threadbare for- mulae "set forth by their ancestors. 'Fhe Chinese social lite is full of man weiimns. which to us ave really wear some. 'But the majority of people in Ching cannot do away with those mannecisms, simply because they weve wd by their forefathers. Such a chiractéristic of mind as that will not ba in fayor. of an utterly new ar rangement' of society. ' to wvational education in . Bince ihe day of the fonuda- sn of + Chinese ompive, China has pover "the official census of the ¥. you to 'what on: is poaulyriz- he fact frm 2 ita opinion iesthmouial | Manchu Since to There were dents, just before I left that city, a! When those stuacnts| satisfied with" the Manchu rule; a good | " ganizativs, partly by the veeeni di- x | tional + Tinis irom Riatosy which WHIG, MONDAY = op We PAGE SEVEN. markable and parts of the home Iand! Furs must be left at home when splendid garment to have along. be wain by a February bride in the good, warm travelling coat which niuy be used also for This' smart and serviceable A TRAVELING COAT i OR SOUTHERN JOURNEYS. one travels {fo the southland; but » motoring is a coat will south, and is of a brown awd cream mixture with a trimming of brown velvet and cloth and small gilt button The lines of the coat 'are especially and easy. fitting, the garment gives an effect of slenderness. atractive, 'and while straight i iwords, if they are somewhat big, seem to them Mheroglyphie, because they have been omly taught at home by their uninstructetl parcuts. These. boys and girls, however, do nol fall mudér the eategory of illites- taey, which 'is summed up in the lig- ten per cent. of the population. fure, Now, you will be able to see in what condition Uhinese education is and now 'ignorant the Chmnese naticn is. 1 do not 'mean to say anything what- ever of an individual (hmaman, but lof that nation wm its collective sense, Is it it for China to have a repub- he? mo which republic any and every { body from the Roosevelt to the shoe maser. 1s supposed to have a voice iu the administration of state? 1 suo wit the pnswer te your own judgmen:, There is ahother obstacle lyinz iu the way 'of republic. This is the . na tive doctrine of ghibhic morality which was fiekt formulated yy Confucios apd altérwards modified by later scholars. 'this doctrine is based on the rigid order of class distinction. 'the moral [formula runs thus: A ws A and B is iB. But there 1s no C by means . ol which the A and B ean be connected or identified in some respects. Taat is to say, a King ix a king, a subject is a subject and . parents are parents, children ang children and so on. They do not teach the principle by which king and sibjects, parents and chil dren can be brought to an equal foot- ing. In other wards, the idea of na- tural nights of individuals is unknown in the mstory of Chinese thought. In the Chinese language we cannot find any corresponding words to such as "meat," "liberty," "or "personality, 'Ihis is no goubt a weakness of Chi nese civihization, the torch of whieh was kindled over four hundred vears ago Therefore, I'womdered how many (hinese people can gonceive themselves as members bi state, under tue iden of eivie right or duty on which the very idea of modern state is oases. I Moreover. this native doctrine ' is predominant in the . Chinese: miind. 'There ate in the PeRin University two sacred emblems which are looked up- on with great veverence by students. Une represents the emperor, the other, Contacting. Aegordmg to tne regulation tof Chipese edugation, the royal edicts and the teachings of Confucius have {been so far the standard of morality. The late famous Chinese scholar, Jong- ph-ung, wrote the ook, ""Hong-Hog- Pen" (an advice to the young in learning.) this vook has been = writ- ten. in the spirit of Confucius, al though ne can find remarkable traces [which clearly show that the auther has extermatly grafted modern Euro- pean -ideds on. his native doctrine. This writer wdvVises the young folks to betigvg themsolves, so that their everyday et can be in strict ha: mony with the teachings of Confucius. 'I his doetrine bus taken possession of the Chinese mind tor the lust twenty five ovntuties. And this doctrine' can never justly 'the 'republican form' of government.' | Li Now, it sill be easy to see from the foregoniy- discussion . that the provis- opal repiphie' mm China Ww impraeti- 'cable and vinmanagea dle. insofar - as tha ions rem . government will be good far China 7 will naturally follow, out 14 do not mean Lo answer it here. Wiat I have to éay is this: Despite the im- been nents ly established ii Ching, the mith and the standard of conduct will Ge shaken and r the tone of the pui tion that the decadence of ihe French nation which is now threaten + of public {feelings rily by the abolition system of French or. wi Uathotie church from sa- na t {. vohditions: ny : ox. are. the- question, What of thing which is able to maigtain faith and the standard of rounduct; Ubina will fall from the frying pan 1a to the lire. : Hére opens a vast field of harvest for the Uhristiane. * The Christians have been working i Ching, in a very active way, 'but the greatest oppor tunity of universal evangelization will geome alter tue present movement - of polities is over in the far east. Ching of yesterday, was the stone rejected by the builders. Who can' tell whether she will become tomorrow 'he wead of the corner? You Christen people, vuilders of humanity, will not reject Lhina m our own days, 1 hope. Shipbuilding Records Broken. New York, Feb. 3.----Last ver wits nesserl the most remarkable activity in shipbuilding in all = marine history. There has heen a sot demand for new ships in all parts of the world, ove year 2,1 vessels having been built. These vessels aggregate 3,36¢,- {076 tons, while the total power of the i engimes required to drive them has heen 11,113,469 tons. The new ships include i hot only all classes of cargo steamers, but the finest and largest types of ocenn liners, which set a new stan- dard for size and luxury of equipment tat sea. Ope company alone, the Hane { burg-American, is building twentvione steamers, sregating 236,000 tons, which will give the line a totsl of I. 25 ,150 tons, the largest in the world under one house Hag, in ---- What Mr. Bradbury Proposes. Brantford Expositor, . Mr. Bradbury (Selkirk) his intro Uuced into: the House of Commons o bill forbidding the depositing of sew age into any Canadian navigable wa ter. It is a very fecble imitation of which Senator Belcourt hes had i before the senate for two years, and jwhich has 'been very much before the ipublie. Mr. Bradbur.'s. bill is un { workable, and the Ottawa Journal, Which has hitherto been silent about | Senator Belcourt's measure, suggests that. the member for Selki:k should {amend it 80 as to provide just exactly what the senator's bill earriod through the senate proposed. The Journal has Lone but it does want its pet tories to steal ideas of liberals. During December there were sixty steawers arrived ai Prince Rupert, B.C., the Pacific coast terminus of the Grand Trumk Pacific, and sixty depar tures. Considering that this is the season of the year when trafic isdight- est, this record must 'be particularly gratifying to those most interested mn the development of Canada's new Pa cific coast pori. ogi dey ing LAYS HAIR HEALTH. It wl estore those zrey hitirs to their nattira! celor ia do ms ver A od scalp slesg wh foes fice "dm Ving ibe new Ll She se. fo grow aa thos preveat babes 1 ih : Don't delay---it may mesa lose of position of inability fo get a gew onc. HAYS HAIR HEALTH will keep apparently no objection 1a tory steals, | the ------ "A TRIGMPH" w rea quaviry = PURE, CLEANLY PREPARED AND DELICIOUS « TONAL SRBeN) omar Is true to ite reputation The Canada" Metal Best Babbitt Metal Co., Ltd. for all general~machin- * Very bearings. FRASER AVE. - TORONTO TE -- LIST YOUR PROPERTIES NOW For Sale or to Rent. : Sales Negotiated Rents Collected Fire Insurance Conveyancing and Real Estate E. Blake Thompson, OVAR RORTHERN CROWN BANK MARKEY SQUARN, : 'Phane 1188 _KINGRTON, ONT. a LE AS % ¥/0" LABATT'S LONDON LAGER "4, BE ISDIA PALE AND EXTRA STOCK ALES, XXX STOUT «STANDARD BevERacrs 31 JOHN LABATT, LIMITED, LONDON A Frm, f, The 0ld Fol Ind advancing years bri: : to constigation. The ¢ Hey COT = 1Ve eY nh J is "NA-DRU-CO" Laxativ - - axatives Entirely different from common laxatives. Pleasant to take, mild and painless. A tablet (or less) at bed-time. regulates the bowels perfect! doses never needed. Compounded, liks all the NA parations, by expert chemists. Money back if not satisfactory, 2c. 8 box. If your druglict has not yet stock send 26¢. and we will mai them. NATIONAL DRUG & CHEMICAL COMPANY OF CANADA, LIMITED, MONTREAL. & S astug tenancy ree increasing RULCO pre d ther Bs : MEXICAN Sweet Oranges 25 oranges 25 cents or $2.25 per box. Juicy and Sweet. Fine for Marmalade. A. J. REES, 166 PRINCESS ST. Phone 58 well when they are appropriating the | 00000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 ERLAND'S B11 G RED LETTER SHOE SALE | Ends Saturday. } February 10th Be sre and have your share of good Shoes at 25 p.c. discount. -- --- i J. H. Sutherland & Bro. "THE EOME OF GOOD SHOES" SUT co LL iH ii.

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