Daily British Whig (1850), 20 Nov 1914, p. 9

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mi be fm your rz to. know what Ae Bebel fhe famous social democrati any two great said Bebel, "will ally bring about a war." @avy, however stroyed, and : her colonies." 3 olal fleet, and all RICH IH bo se a and Fra gland will bri = destruction It in the dest bee that Germar le WAr with En tthe ambitions of hy id ; 5 a De accomplish Hoamstthe recover Alsace- 8. 20d Peri pn the left bank ne. Wotle Russia would WIM her aspirations of fier Pplish possessio b i the estuaries of hg Ni tala, and some oths War," warned the fy + 'Germany will not victories so easily all school text "The same superior- that wé had in Dilute imposs:hi- nities have nearly equal s Ss and quantity future war will most big '& uggle in which is ¢o 3 over each oth. It will 'be mutua Bide is the condi 'during the war trade and "all exports. In ical situation; Elst without ex- there will be an problem. He by y can- 'O08 of living will ) 1 want will ent countries, ] ds of such in< i, Nobel, Vickers, @ paid wore at: © bel, .ulterances of r,"" the most rid, as 14 "Europe ' wou joW: into the blood- Mes.--S. P. P. RALIA. RE Cos OH itement was issued i¢ government has in: British government dy to hand over the ther German islands 'which are temporarily Japanese to an Aus f British govern- gried the Japanese gov- ts intention to ast do . special. Australian dispatched to 'the fe- ; ain in ocoupation mn of the war, of ultimate disposal "be a question of allied powers. overnment - will ,, Nov. 20--The fol | 20 émii was taken up with. ¢, chairman of the , such as storekeepers rial workers, The agricul "Wus not strongly , most of them having pro- "gone to Holland. E 4 ae gees sitll continue to ar- 500 having registered id ong this Seek. All the able-bodied fe being persucded to join the 5 France. $ i Gladstone's statement # Bh information | gathered J GEents-general of the variviis "that the Belgians display: uterest in the New World, d oner of omigration, has d id: he present moment is ¢ i070 ; gr the launching of aay Mhpalgn. The transportation colpanies were all willing and: pre- pared'to handle a hig cheme of emi» igh, - but definite instrugtipns tm 'the Canadian government causs ed its abandonment. : ? { The steamer Tremorvah from Hal: arrived at Rotterdam 'with a ; of Canadian foadstadls for the destitute Belgians. The ' cargo in 3,025 tons from Nova Seotia, 1,660 tons from New Bruns- wick and 227 tons from Quebec. tax egr ' i on Portland Tewnship Council ie Harrowsmith, Nov. 19. --Members adopted, On' motion, Réynolds- Watson... Johtt Déwker was = given that portien of the 10th concession vod: sllowance opposite his place Aer. ad for township use. Mov- ed. eyer-Reynolds,. that the clerk §o instructed to prepare a by- law. confirming the appointment of an, ofticér to "enforce local option H ip of Portland. Car. A mma paid: 87, A Emith 1-2 3 Nork So, ciel , $10; Willjam Scales, wo! 3 on 12; as: George Jeffrey, eulyért on 'toad; $2. Thomas Aateon, drawing plank on Camden dary; $2.50, aakioh Sie question of |- refugees in Britain were] | On d. Smith, Dominion: com- ; all present Minutes of last méeting |' Frederick, Amiey, $5.05, inde ple [mies Stan ------ NC FTELD KITCHEN © ON SHLISBURY PLAN ® AA» A GERMAN PROFESSOR'S _ dietter. Throws All Others Ianto the Shade: | Bordeaux, Nov. 19.--An unsigned Iéttér- printed in an Amsterdam re- yléw on the 'situation in Germany having catised 'a senpation, the edi- tor 'was 'challenged 'to prove the au- thenticity of the letter and now re- prints it over the signature of Addit Lasdon; ' a privy couneitlor 'and. a proteéssdr fn the University of Berlin, 7, "Nobody," the letter Says, 'can jremain-ientral as regards Germany, One must either cQusider. her the most perfact potitical creation knows histary "or approve of her 'com- «extemingtion. © A man who is "making "tie; = $3 onard us on '38 rods of wire James Alton, bonus on Wf wire fence; $3.80, D. Hring culbert near James , Municipal World, Col- "Guide; $7.20, Sawyer Mas. $9, Tepatrs for crusher;' $4.50, | 'Work' on cement walk at ith; $3, Leonard Meeks, bonus on 30 rods of wire fence; $8:10, J. Gallagher, expenses of immigrapt family; $35, Sam Irish, 1 1 expenses of Mrs. I. Mills; v Sam _Jrish, six Li irs township machinery; 3 , Smith, repairing side- vominsg iver 60c, J. 8) in oan always keep Clodnags {fou ae ta 'German : knows 'nothing of hy. We are' ; Autttations <u t kiser, :'delitite: generis hu- Rain shna always protected peace; right Shouar.: Phe greater. 'his tho « mote' modest: he. is. "ehancellor, Herr von Bethmiann. C iis Ahe most eminent 'man living. 2: He has. no. higher care. than truth, loyalty -and right, - Our army 18,80 ta speak, a reduced image. -of the intélligence and morality of the ' people. . We do' good to all. 'Was not destroyed. 'We only urned the ' houses of murderers. 1 j-cathedral was not 'demolish « Mawad the French who 'provok- the damage. : Terk ot towards her Stomach. Mother, daddy and the children X ep feeling fing by tak- ibg this delicious fruit laxative as oceaBion demands. ~ Nothing else the stomach, liver and bow- thoroughly without griping. nm 4 little 'at night and 'in morning all the foul, constipated ae sour bile and fermenting food, Jn the bowels gently Wats system, en you awak- ne e, indigestion, sour- , bad breath, fever '1s gone; your stomach FRIDAY re -------------------- AP n A ---- ------ ga - bd "APTER A SQUARE MFALS : 'NEW PICTURES 0 F THE CANADIAN TROOPS AT SALISBURY PLAIN. ih | Christian vist 4 Wé represent os a hd § TOME. A ruin, France may yet be saved. As for Russia, she can no longer be our neighbor.. We shall wipe her out.' But our real adversary is Eng- land. Woe tp thee, "perfidious Al- bion' God {8 with us and defends our just cause." : Another letter from the same pen warns Holland ' that she is merely an appendage of Germany and exists as a state only by Germany's con- déscension. | "We thank God," this letter says, "that the Duteh are not our friends. We ignore their "miserable little bourgeois existence, Our law Is reason, our strength the stréngth of the spirit, our victory the 'victory of thought. We are truthful, Our characters are' humanity, gentleless and conkicientibusness -- the real 8.10 a wicked world: ove Tha Dod As with I, § Big Increase of Capital, Betlin, ' Now, 19. ~The capital of the Kr 'company, makers of Ger: mena 'uns, is "to be 'increased from 70,000,000 to J25:000,500 aks according to the proposal of the di- reptors, ich was submitted to 2 eral meeting bi the company a? Po Nov, 12th. Lord Kitchener has sanctioned the formation' at Birkenhead of a battais ion' consisting of 'men' between five feet and five feet three inches. It will be called "The Bantams' Battalion.' FRUIT LAXATIVE FOR MAMMA, DAD, + BABY, "CALIFORNIA' SYRUP OF FIGS" Gok {nis p Galomiel, Oil or Salts ci op Pliage Bh Bg is sweet, liver and howels clean, and you .feel grand. "California. Syrup of Figs" is a family laxative, Everyone from grandpa to baby cali &afely take it and mo onte is ever .disappointed in ite pleasant action. Millions of moth- ers know. that it is the fdeal laxative to give cross, sick, feverish childrén. But get the genuine. ' Ask your drug- gist' for a 60 p eof ""Califor- olin, Syrup of which has direc- tions for be Je} of all ag- os and FoF: u 'each bottle. Refuse with contempt the cheaper Fig Syrups and" -dounterfeits. See ithat it 'bears thé pame~-- 'California Pig. Syrup: Company." WY A WRESTLING BOUT 407 BER 20, 2914 - SUCCESSION DUTIES. Ontario Receipts This Year Nearly Double Estimate. Toronto, Nov, 20---Succession du- ties paid to the provincial treasurer for the fiscal year just closed amount ed to $1,287,633, as compared with $1,146,144 for the fiscal year of 1912-1913, an increase of over $141,000. The estimate given by Hon. Mr. Lucas on his budget last session estimated succession duties at $700,000, but at the time admitt- ed that these figures were only no- minal. The increase this year is due .to causes affecting the growing wealth of. the provinee, and scarcely' any benefit has been received from the increased scale of duties imposed by the amendments.made to the law at the. last session 'of the house. Eight: teén 'months are allowed in which settlement can be made by estates, $0 the augumented revenge under the new scale will not. show {itself for auother year. A SAD EPISODE Frozen To Death on His Wedding Day. Manchester, N.Y., Nov. '19.---Miss Awelia © Schultz and her wedding party waited in vain in St. Joseph's cathedral yesterday for the groom, Timothy F. Cronin, twenty-three years old, to show up for the oere- mony, No word having been receiv- ed from him his fiancee and her friends' left the church and returned to their homes. His failure to. ap- pear was explained when his body was found near Roek Ribbon. He had been. frozen to death, No ex- planation was given as to how he lost his life, NEW AND STRONGER EMDEN On Its Bow Will Be Affixed An Iron Cross. bi Amsterdam, Nov, 19.-- Replying 1? a telegram from the town of Bmden, after which was named the cruiser which wrought so much damage in the Indian ocean until it was over taken and destroyed by the . Austra- lian eruiser Sydney, the kaiser sent the following message : [ "A new and stronger Emden shall arise in' the German navy, which will duplicate the feats of the ship that was lost. On its bow will be affixed the irom cross, to commemor- ate the glory of the old Emden." ; ra London Press Is Not Disposed to Ori- ticize. .. london, Nov. 20---The British public is realizing that desperste dis- eases need desperdte remiédies and is not disposed to cFiticize the. govern- ment's proposal to 'meet the emnor- mous expanses of the war by ificreas- ing the levy on incomes and taxing beer and tea to aid in raising $2.- 250,000,000. : The Times "This large increase in direct tax- ation undoubtedly will be a heavy burden, although it will be shodider- ed with the patriotism on which the government knows it ean count." The Daily Express SAYSI--~ "Great Britain js fighting for her existence and while her soldiers and edilors are ready to meet death and awful suffering. in the nation's cause; the men and women. who are left at home must pay the fighting bill with equal Durags aud determination." The Daily News says: -- "The courage with which Lloyd George faces the problem will be approved by the country and in- cidentally will make an excellent im- pression abroad 'on financiers. The occasion is unprecedented, for never before has the couniry been called upon to provide for expenditure on a scale at all approaching that now be- ing incurred." The Daily Mail says: -- "Fhe loan appeals to every from both a patriotic and "financial viewpoint. It is a magnificent in- vestment." The Morning Post says: "The people of this country wilk pay without a murmur whatever they must pay to carry on the war to the only conclusion they can, gon- template." The Daily Telegraph argues that the burden laid on the patient. in- come taxpayers is out of all propor- tion to that imposed elsewhere. ------ : NO BELGIANS FOR RUSSIA. German Press Gang Methods Are Re- sistance. London, Nov. 20--The Morning Post says that among the Belgian fu- gitives who reached London yester- day were three civil guards from Ver diers, who report that since King Albert made his last appeal for men to join the Russian army, the Ger- mans have taken drastic measures to recruit their forces in Belgium. In particular, these men say, they are placing those young men who belon- ged, to the civil guard under rigid surveillance. The Germans do not conceal . their intentions; they 'want those men to go to Germany and take up arms against the Russians. The men refused, and, according to the fugitives, Uhlans are shooting down the civil guards who try to es- cape to the Dutch frontier. A few days ago there was a des- berate encounter between a patrol of Ublans and '240 members of the civil guard at Seraing, on. the Meuse. These men. ware. determined thai they would not go to Germany, and concealed themselves in a woods. where they were discovered by "the Uhlans who opened. fire. The civil guards had. no firearms, for the Germans had made a house-to-house collection of weapons as soon as they occupied; but they had managed to obtain knives, and with these they attacked the Germans, Several Uhl. ans were killed and a few of the civil guards were wounded. The fight occurred at night, and most of the men managed to escape in the dark- ness and arrived at Maestricht, on the Dutch frontier. ------s CHRISTMAS GIFTS TO TROOPS. What They Need and How to Reach Them London, Nov, 20--- Misses mer and Arnoldi, Munster militia to the field comfor contingent, have of lieutenants for vices. Field comforts are now needed by the men here, especially cholera belts, sleeping caps, socks and 'muff- lers in great numbers, also cigarettes and pipes. Christmas presents to the troops should be sent to Miss Plummer, Field Comforts, Canadian Contin- gent, Salisbury, and subscriptions for the same fund to Miss Arnoldi. The authorities are anxious to give this publicity throughout the domin- on. Gold has benefited hundreds ruined thousands. Plum- éppointed by. the také charge of of the Canadian n given the rank their special ser- and 1 Setatca. To ' one Paris, Nov. 20--Two days ago Georges Clemenceau wrote an eds torial in 'Homme Enchance, in which he called the attention of the autho- rities to a soldier's widow who was not receiving adequate assistance since her husband's death. At ¥ point where he inserted the woman's letter--with the words: "I hive re- ceived the following moving letter, 44 the censor obliterated her appeal, Now M. Clemencean attacks the treatment nccorded him with the bit terest garcasm. "The woman," he says, "asks France: "What will' you 0 for me who hasgivén my husband's life?" What do you reply, socialist seigneurs,. who contemplate, you from gilded armchairs, the results of your congress of International brotherhood; oh, you smiling augurs of radicalisin and moderation. You reply with Blutcher's famous expres- slon: 'Halts 'Maul' (Shut mouth). Your impose upon the widows of the men - who died for France. It is too much, I conjure you in the public interest to stop. Who aré to bid all France be silent? I pray you, reflect, reflect!" A "ARRAS NOW A GRAVE. Clergymen Tell of Devastation Caused By The Germans. Boulogne, France, Nov. 20--A clergyman, who remained in Arras through every bombardment, has given nie this description of the town as it exists to-day: "I have stayed and I am going to continje to stay at my post in this | ruined town. Yesterday the place | had another bombardment, the fourth. Arras Is now a grave. The churches and the cathedral are all gone, Four hundred houses have béen burned. The roads are disap- pearing and leaving enormops cavi- ties. Yesterday the civil and miltary y hospital 'at St. Jean was shelled for the tenth time, The wounded and sick were placed in the cellars. One of them was the chief ate, who was badly wounded by a shell. The hospice is also a victim of the explosion of shells, 30 people being killed and 17 injured. The dead and wounded are all huddled together in cellars. The only people still seen in the streets are priests and soldiers. For 'over'a month we have heard a constant cannonade, and the enemy has been within two miles of our town for nearly four weeks." A TOBACCO FUND. Cigarettes and Tobaéco Sent Cheaply To "Tommy Atkins," The London Weekly Dispatch has already raised £10,000 for its tobac- co fund. This money is used for sending tobacco to the men at the front, and for every six-pence sent to thefynd, 35 cigarettes 2 ounces of to i ne] a Tet ok at 48 Ang | A are lahelled-yith the name of the donor, whether Sant. Lo:the individual mem- bers of the force, or to the battalions where they are distributed. The rea- Son so much tobacco can 'be sent for such a small amount: is that the cis garettes and tobacco are free of duty and postal charges. The address to which any money for this purpose can be sent is, "Tobacco Fund, Weekly Dispatch, Carnjelite House, Carmelite street; London, E.C."" The "Tommy Atkins," "at the front great ly 'appreciate the solice and enjoy- ment tobacco gives. - War Oddities. London.-- Fatal treet agfidents have increased ii the capital 25 per- cent., since the streets were ordered darkened, to prevent possible raiding by Zeppelins. Amsterdam.-- German mines dis- tributed in the North Sea have an at- tachment resembling a submarine periscope to lure allied ships into ramming them, London.--Fifty-five dollars a sec- ond is what 'the war is costing Great Britain, according to Sidney Webb, professor of public administration at" London University. The British government has cons tributed $500,000 to the Belgian gov- ernment for the purchase of food- stuffs for the desMtute fnhabitants of that country. aL 2 Lots of 'people attract atteriffon whe are not in other ways attractive. Prejudice is the daughter of ignor- your

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