Daily British Whig (1850), 16 Nov 1914, p. 6

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"THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1914. Et 500 acves, $1,000, Good bluish, never-falling water. 120 acres cleared. Log dwelling: frame barn; hie stwvie, First class stock farm, W, B, Boivin & Son. Real Estate Fire Insurance EUROPEAN AGENCY Wholesale Indents promptly execut- ed at lowest cash prices for all Brit- fsb and Continental goods, including ~ Books and Stationery, Boots, Shoes and Leather, Chemicals and Druggists' Sundries, China, Earthenware and Glass- ware. Oycles, Motor Cars and Accessor- fea. Drapery, Millinery and Piece ds, Fancy Goods and Perfumery, Hardware, Machinery and Metals, Jewellery, Plate and Watches, Photographic and Optical Goods, ; Provisions and Ollmen's Stores, Special Quotations on Demand. Sample Cases from upwards. Consignments of uce Sold on WILLIAM WILSON &. SONS (Established 1814), 25, Abchurcy; Lame, London, E.O. Cable Address: "Annuaire London." STOMACH HEALTH. -- OR NO COST TO. YOU Very likely others have advised you to use Rexall Dyspepsia Tablets, .. because scores of people in this com- munity Believe them to be the best remedy ever made for Dyspepsia and indigestion. - That is what we think, 100, because we know what they have done for others and what they are made of. We have so much faith in them that we urge you to try them at our flak. If they don't help you, they 'won't cost you a cent. If they don't do all that you want them to slo---if they don't restore your stom-) ach to health and make your diges- tion ~--just tell us and we will give back your money without a word or question, « Containing Pepsin and Bismuth, two of the greatest digestive aids known to medical sclence they soothe the inflamed stomach lining, help in the secretion of gastric juice, check heartburn and distress, promote reg- ular bowel action, and make it pos- sible for you to eat whatever you like whenever yon like, with the comfort- ing assurance that there will be no bad after-effects. We believe them to be the best remedy made for dys- pepsia and Tndigestion. Sold only at the more than 7,000 Rexall Stores, and in this town only at our store, Three sizes, 25¢, 50¢ and $1.00. Mahood's Drug Store, Kingston, Ont. Special i in Dining Raom Furniture This chair in quartered oak polish finish, leather seat. 5 small and 1] chairs, only $18.00 per set. diningroom setts, fumed pieces, latest design, only bine, from $14.00 to Englieh 3 0 O'clock arate for $1.50 6 line in Roma snd Brass prices. y {to forward LEFT THER WOUNDED RUSSIANS INFLICT GREAT LOSS. ES UPON TURKISH COLUMNS. Enemy Fled Into Mountains in Dis- order," Pursued by Russian Cav alry. Petrograd, Nov. 14--The follow- ing communication from the general staf of the Russian army in the Sancasus, dated Tiflis, is made pub- ie. "The attacks of the Turks on our positions at Koprukeui on November 11 were repulsed with great losses to the. Turks, A Turkish column which attempted to turn our left wing, was subjected to the cross fire of our artillery, and was impeiuously at - tacked by our infantry. The Turks fled into the mountains in complete disorder, pursued by our cavalry. 'Under the protection of the forti- fied positions of Devehommu the Turks continue to concentrate troops at Erzerum. They apparently are recelving reinforcement by way of Trebizond. "On November 9 the Turks were attacked and defeated in Khanessour Pass, on the road from Azerbaijan to Van. They retreated rapidly in disorder, leaving bebind them thelr dead and wounded. ON TRIAL AS A SPY. Barber in London Tried to Get In- formation From Bluejacket, London, Nov. 14---The spy peril which is agitating the country, and which was the subject of a debate in the House of Commons to-night and in the House of Lords the previous night, was exemplified to-day in the trial of Gustay Ernst, a hairdresses, at Old Bailey. The accused was al- leged to have conspired with Master Spy Steinhauer in getting a man named Ireland, of the H.M.S., Fox- hound, to communicate information prejudicial to the interests of the state : Ernst is a British-born subject of German descent, and is married to a German woman. He was one of the first aliens arrested after the declar ation of war, but obtained his re lease as a British subject. After the authorities had been watching his correspondence he was arrested again ou the charge of being a spy It was shown that he had been in dally communication with Steinhauer of Potsdam, receiving pay from him letters to useful people The casé was adjourned. HIGH C Largely Diie to Housewives' Ignoran- ce, "Tis Said. New York, Nov. 14---Ignorance on the part of housewives is responsible in large measure for the high cost of living, in the opinion of Mayor Mitchel"s food supply committee, of which George W. Perkins, is chair man. Working girls and those rear | ed in the Lomes of the well-to-do are equally at fault, according to the report. Young women employed in offices, stores and factories, before their Mariage, have little or no practical | training in the art of housekeeping, the committee finds. -The same is true, it is held, of the daughters of | prosperous families, where the mis- taken notion prevails that it is not necessary for them to learn house- keeping. The committee contends that ex- travagance and waste in households, headed by women not trained = home-keeping, ( lead to large anu | unnecessary drains upon the city's food supply. Convicted On « huge of Be gging.. London, Nov. 16--Captain Shaw, of the Canadian Field Artillery, ask- ed the Marlborough Street magistrate to make an example of a sergeant in the contingent who was charged with begging. The prisoner, who got one month, declared he served in South Africa and gave up a good si- tuation in Canada to join the contia-- gent, Two more relief steamers, the Ag amemenon and the Niches, carrying about $200,000 worth of fobd to the famine-stricken districts . of Belgium, are to leave New York about Nov 25th. Sir Charles Macara has resigned the presidency of the British Master Cotton Spinners. perfect condition. ~R KILLED 600 WITH ONE GUN, ; Feat of Heroic French Gunner Battle of Vailly. Nov. 14--At the battle the French were obliged to unable to get at Paris, of Vailly, fall back and were away with all their guns. They had féme to bury most of them, though, the only one they did not bury was spiked so that the Germans eould not make any use of it. It was with this gun that the gfin- ner of the battery covered himself with glory. The gun crew had been ordered back but he declared that he would not abandon the gun while ammunition was left. He methodically emptied shell after shell into the Germans, who were moving up in serried ranks only half a mile away. Closer and closer they came, firing volleys as they ad- vanced, but the gunner "stood his ground, and still had a doxen shells left when they were not more than three hundred yards away. At this distance he bowled them over like nine-pins, but nothing could stop them. He let fly his last shell at only fifty yards and did such awful execution that he was able to re move the breech bloek and make good his escape, notwithstanding that he had received a bullet berw- £en his ribs. Hardened as they were to the slaughter, some of those who witne sed the deed turned faint at the ghastly sight of the mangled Ger- mans more than six hundred of them who ware blown to pieces with in five hundred yards of the gun THE The mans out of the W man are their GERMANY rned the Ge hments eas NO THEOLOGICAL COLLEGE Board Turns Down Sas. katchewan Desire. Winnipeg, Nov. 14--The desire of the Saskatchewan conference for the establishment of a theological col lege at Saskatoon in{gonnection with the Sas y Lersity was refysed: yesterday 3 edd ho- dif Board of Education, the bond deciding 'that it could not at the pr sent time grant the request, whi fully sympathizing with the reaso for which the request was made. A committee consisting of Dr Graham, gener secretary of educa tion: Dr. Bowles, Toronto, and Dr Riddell, Edmonton, was appointed to confer with the Wesley college board aso formulating plans for re- suming the teaching of arts at Wes ley college. , Methodist Not Divided In Death, Brockville, Ont., Nov. 16 Follow ing the death of her husband fout days ago, Mrs. James Tracey dled a St. Vincent de Paul hospital was very ill and the death of Mr Tracey hastened her end. Mrs. Tra cey was born in Quebec, and when a child took up her residence in Mont real. There she married Mr. Tracey and they came to Brockville in 1832 She The United States 'has more stringent rules regarding issuances and use of passports, adopted the BRIGHT tobacco LATEST WAR TIDINGS A general pagic prevails in East: ern Silesia. Civilians with all their articles of value, continue to flee In great numbers to Berlin, Dres- den and other towns. A proclamation has been issued in Antwerp prohibiting all inhab.ants including Germans, leaving that city. From the séa to the north of Lille, fighting for the allies is satisfac- tory. Two German attacks near Ypres and Ennerbeck were repuls- ed with heavy loss. The enemy is making desperate attempts between Labassee and Arras. A French dorpedo hoat entered Dunkirk harbour, reporting the sink- ing af a German submarine in the channel after. being rammed by a de- stroyer. A Yieuna despatch admits fierce resistance of the Servians against the Austrian Invasio Snow and rain impede operatiou's. Fighting: in the Caucasus greatly elackened on Saturday only a few de techmeént of Kurdish cavalry faeing the Russians, A council of Malian Winisters ap propriated eighty million dollars Tor new military expenses. This seem: to foreshadow early Italian opera tions. A Te Deum was sung on Sunda) in the. Belgian church in the Ru Charonne, Paris, in King Albert's honor. In Galicia, icial in- the and and according to oil formation given out in Berlin, Russians continue to advance have occupied Tarnow, Jaslo Krosno. The Sultan of Kelantan, a petty native state in Siam, had given as- surance of the loyalty of his people, and that there would be po local dis- turbance as a result of war between Great Britain and Turkey The German squadron of Admiral Von Spee is again on the high seas searching for British vessels in the Pacific The German ships are fly- ing the Japanese flag A mysterious individual, known under the names of Horst Von Der Goltz and Bridghan Taylor, deserib- ed as a major in the Mexican army and suspected of bein German spy, was remanded. in a Lor t court on the charge of gister as an alien enemy In the eastern theatre ' Russian successes continue. The Ger- mans lost 80,000 in their Kalisz re treat Auother big battle is devel- oping on the Polish frontier Cracow is to be abandoned to the Austrian garrison, the German for- ces from there being moved to Op pein, 50 miles south-east of Breslau, which, with Thorn, will be thé new German home defence base. For the moment Berlin, according to London opinion, appears to regard the Russian menace as of paramount importance and the transfer - of troops to that front has its repercus sion on the Belgian battlefield. Ths allies, however, are finding the Ge: of ! reach ! none of the enemy are now man defensive as stubborn and dif ficult to penetrate as the Germans [found the British and French lines | during the recent deadly but futile | efforts around Ypres and Dixmude The attempts of the Germans t Calais have been frustrated west © the Yser river, The British fleet and Indian troops have captured forts at th entrance of the Gulf of Aden At Paris, it is reperted that Germans have prepared triple line the |of defence near the Rhine river The only admission regardi battleship Audacious ths miralty will make is that ing repaired. King Albert of Belgium arrived 1 Paris Name Day on Sunday. The city was decorated with flags and numerous fetes were arranged. The Sunday afternoon Paris offi cial reports say that Saturday was quiet on the whole front. The Ger mans attempted several attacks io the north, east and south of Ypres but all were reoulsed with heav losses. Between Lys and Oise (he fighting continued, Upon the re mainder of the front, as far as Ios there was artillery fighting vithout importance. for raine, The German government has con sented to facilitatethedeparturefrom Germany of British women, children under seventeen, and men except be tween the ages of seventeen and fifty-five. THERE NEVER WAS" A CHEWING TOBACCO SO DELICIOUSLY GOOD AS PACIF, for it is just pure and wholesome It is clean too == every plug wrapped separately in foil so that no dirt or soiled hands can touch it or prevent it reaching you in Buy A PLUG TO-DAY AS YOU a0 BY YOUR DEALER'S AND NOTE HOW DIFFERENT IT IS FROM THE KINDS SOLD IN BULK. Inside the wrapper you will find one 'of the much sought after satin inserts om which so many beautiful things can be made. See displays 'around town. 18,000,000 RESERV ES. Resources of Fighting Men Germany Can Draw Upon. London, Nov. 16---According to the Cologne Gazette, the combined strength of German and Austrian re- serves is 18,000,000 men, "There are Germany and 240,600 in and recruits of the 1914 tion of both countries 1,000000 each. This makes a fcial of 4,250,- 0040, but, according to the- Rheinish paper, this estimate ik altog gether in- complete. In Germany, as in Austria, that portion of the Landsturm whieh has not yet seen any service -is almost as good as untouched, and, accord- lng to the best authorities, this un- touched Landsturm amounts for Germany to 7,000,000 men. They are between the ages of 20 and 45. Already the vast majority ef (hese men have béen registered by the mi- litary authdrities. as suitable. Only a very small percentage may he re- garded as hardly fit for the front, but they are capable of other mili- tary duties. In Austria this untouched Lands- turm is placed at 5,000,000, making 12,000,000 for both cotntries. It we deduet 2,000,000, from this total for volunteers who have already been counted we get a total of 14.- 250,000 as still available for active military service, and il the age limit is raised from 45 to 650 years and the limit at the other end bé reduced from 20 to 18 years, we obtain an additional 2,750,000, which, added {o-14,2560,000, makes the grand total 18,000,000. Austria, conserip- ? NEXT NAVAL BATTLE Dresden, oft Co erman raiser t in th g southward niles South of REJOICE OVER IT. For Is Tau 16- \ Sweet Morsel Japanese Toronto, No he Star in its ar review says 'The capture « sing-Tau with iis garrison of seven wr eight thousand men and hundreds f big guns. is good news. The garri on put up 'a very creditable defence for two months, but finally had to ield to the Japanese, as the Rus- ians did at Port Arthur, in spite of he deelaration of is commander hat "We never shall surrender," Stoeessel made a similar declaration luring the siege of the great Rus- ian fortress, and it was no disgrace o him that he later was the victim if circumstances. Tsing-Tau is a sweet morsel for he Japanese Germany has always mphasized the 'yellow peril" and took the initiative in robbing Japan f her spoils of victory after the war gainst China about twenty years go Port Arthur was taken away from Japan by the European powers it that time but Russia subsequently eized Port Arthur for herself, while iermany found occasion to grab Ts< ng-Tau und the 117 square miles of erritory around it forming th on- escion of Kiau-Chan Ten years igo Japan made wa: 1 anerin ane, ot back Port Arthur This year » war on Germany and se ng-Tau. Now the "account . Japan does not let zo of inything on which she gets her fin vers. China can sigh for the return if Kiau-Chau, Japan will keep it. Germany had great ambitions in he Far East and the - kaiser had nany millions of dollars spent in naking Tsing-Tau a great port for ommerté as well as a great naval rage of military strenghold. He has iardly a glimmer of hope that his 1avy €an obtain command of the sea ind Kiau'Chau must be considered permanently lost. And with the loss »f «their chief naval base, following he capture by the Japanese -of all the German islands in mid-Paeifie, the German cruisers Emden, Scharn- 10rst, and Gneisenau are vagrants indeed. Germany had vast supplies of all descriptions at Tsing-Tgu, bat most: of . these, probably, were des- troyed by the plucky defenders be fore they hauled down their flag Brutal' Crime , Punished. "Brantford, Nov. 16--Ten years in he penitentiiry, with fifteen lashes six months after entering, and an- ther fifteen at.the send of the first Lear, was the penalty meted out te William Draper, convicted by Judge "Hardy of a most atrocious assault on 1 six-year-old girl. Judge Hatdy se- verely scored the defendant, whose plea had been drunkenness, Acquitted Of Theft Charge. Cobourg, Nov. 16--Oscar Cronk- aright, Treaton, came up fortrial be- fore Judge Ward here on the charge of having stolen a sum of maney 'rom Mr, : Peacock, of Colborne. Leadin® citizens of Trenton, jnelud- ng the mayor and chief of police, estified to Cronkwright's good sharacter. He was acquitted. Monmouth's Crew 740. ndon, Nov.. 16--It is officially announced 'that the British cruiser M JE, Willch yaa atly in the battle ot id Si 2,060,000 volunteers in | THE ONLY CURE FOR CONSTIPATION Is | "Fruil-3- tives "--That Wonderful Remedy Made From Fruit Juices. ' Avom, Onr, MAY 14th, 1913. "1 have used * Mruit-a-tives" for Indigestion aad: tion with most excellent results, and they out; nue to be my only 'hen I first started about six years to usé them, 1 took four at a dose gra- dually reduced the dose tooue tablet at night, Before taking *'Fruit-a-tives", I took salts amd other pills but the treatment was too harsh. I thought'I ma} ht as well suffer from the illness ron these treatments. Finally, I ait " Pruit-a-tives * ad with a letter in which some one recommended them very highly, so I tried them, and I have no hesitation in recommending them." ANNIE E. CORBETT, soc. a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size, 25¢. At all dealers or sent on receipt ol price by Fruit-a-tives Limited, Ottawa: ol } MN Re ER ¥ SEEDED RAISINS Ready for Immediate Use If you are seeking the finest of California's Muscatel Raisins foryour puddings, cakes and pies, then Swn- Kise will satisfy Cvery requirement. SUN-KIST Seeded Raisins arg the years of experience an catering to 'the desires of particular people. Seeded eptirely by machinery and packed in sanitary packages Ready for Immediate Use. Geo. Robertson & Son, Limited result of Emperor Will ale villa his Q $5 000,000 to build rr meee and @tOPYthing } Works, Cor, ALE --- STOUT --- LAGER® PURE -- Paratasie -- Nutritious -- BEVERAGES FOR SALE BY WINE axp SPIRIT MERCHANTS EVERYWHERE LOCAL OPTION --Residents in the locdl option districts can legally order from this brewery whatever they require for personal or family use. Write to JOHN LABATT, Loaren, 4 SWEET CIDER, -30c per Gallon' Coast Sealed Oysters, 60c per Quart D. COUPER '] Phone 768 241-8 Princess Bt. | Prompt delivery. Kingston Cem- ent Products We Make "EMENT BLOCKS, SILLS, TELS, PIER BLOCKS, VASES, LIN. BRICK, in cement. Veran- dah work a specialty, OFFICE WELLINGTON ST, 'harles and Patrick Sts, F. Norman, Manage 137 « Horse WHILE SHOPPING | | Enjoy Afternoon Tea at MARBLE HALL 238 Princess Street. Dainty Refreshments and Pure | ce Cream. i | George Masoud, Prop: "Phone 980, | d : IVY ETP YT TTY ETRE wE Tee REAL ESTATE _ Far Sale eT Frame house on Street with vd stabling, © goed Suitable for a carter, $400.00 t, invest. Cement block house on Raglan Road, $1950.00. Double house on Stanley Street, improvements, renting for $18.00 per month. $200. will handle this proposition. James improvements, Real Estate and insurance Office 177 Wellington St. Lonnon, Overcoatings Fal Suitings Prices Reasonable Crawford & Walsh,

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