PAGE SIX Aa FORM NO REAL ARMY THE WHITEWASHING REPORT Of the Boot Committee Carried On Panty Vote. THE DATLY BRITISH WHIG, TUESDAY, APRIL 13, 1915, THE RUSSIANS IANS WICTORS scm EIGHT: DAY FIGHT MOUNTAINS, TWO BASEBALL [TS Denia Hs Become Hairless ABOUT VON TREITSCHKE. His Work Is One of the Chief Causes of the Present War. Von Treitschke is a name one often comes across these days, when so much is being written to interpret the German spirit to English. readers. This German, Von Treitschke, is said to have been one of the ereators of that spirit,sor at any rate one who Tho gave expression to it in a manner that appealed to the attention of the edu- cated class. He was an historian-- both a writer and a teacher of his- tory--and in his lectures and writ- Honorary Presidents: ings he did much to foster the | jin Mctiali, Edward 1 rden 1 1 ! spirit that is the inspiration of the | ; jy, wiv, Frederick Todd. my, 1 Hughes q RT nd sires now world-hated Prussian militar- on '[homas Nichols n, A.W officer ier Borden r at mid ism. In closing a sketch of this |.. and « s r: Honorary Vice iid the blame § now well known German historian = prs lent, r ampbeli, R. Har pplied on the The Boston flerald writes: -- ris, E. P. Jenkins, "R. Givens, A . Department "Treitschke died in 1896, looking |. Freadgold, Robert Mchee, M. Ob by the forward. with confidence to the day | erpdorfies Harvey Milne, George Ma Hes when, as Geibel sang, - the world soud, i liam pe. John Cousineau, would find healing at the touch of J n: President, Thomas the German character. He looked Sands: Firs st Viee-Pre: dent, Joseph ang vo air will look forward to this day in a pious, Pray- | Shea; ' Second Vice-President, Stanley he ndred times Batt - 2 erful mood, 'God will see to it that | knox: Manager, Garnet Fatord: Secre- Hiiauid ron at ay war always recurs as a drastic medi- | tary-Treasurer, Charles €ross:; Official |i theXpensive and cine for the human race.' That | Scorer, W. McCutcheon: Mascot, 'lI all vou Will need no. matte how Treitschke was not spared to be the | Elmer. | uch dandralt. oon ar by simple remedy never fails. NO PLACE LIKE HCOME--IF YOU OWN IT. VON HINDENBURG RG LAUGHS KITCHENER'S MILLIONS, AT IN'AN IN THE HELD ORGANIZATIO ATION: MEETI ON MONDAY EVENING. The Sapolios And the Officers And Are Ready To Eater The City Baseball League. want plenty d to C anada' are being white BL o7de brave 3 washed Abilify German General Regards Russians Fighting Too Lightly--Believet End of War day has debated Wins Prais Next Move Of In Sight, 1€ 1 or and minority rep i fre In Frid Berlin, April 13 n cot i h responder Cabasi Rend ad ern industr an inter , the Opposit eral vor I German Lord Kit said Czar's Forces Jof- '. jiu of the Victorias Elect | me vernme Six room brick veneer house on the west side of city, for $2,150.00 for quick sale. SIX room frame house, near Froutenac Park, with improve. ments, for $1 850.00, Solid birck house on Clergy Street, with hot water furnace, all improvements, stable, $3,250.00. Frame house on a corner with good, stable, suitable for carter, must be sold by May 1. £1.200,00, Rough cast house, six rooms, on very easy terms, $1,300.00. HORACE F. NORMAN Real Estate and Insurance Office 177 Wellington St. City Leagt held in the ing on Monday night oflicers : VW a meeti ild destroy 1bout four arvon; night retiring; use enough to moisten the scalp and rub i gently with the finger tips morning, moet if not all of dandruff will be gone, and three or four more applications will completely dive and entirely destroy every single sign and trace i Unes James: Spence, Dr. Jd, Lem Wheat form ne formed « vour Ge official who former neral inition but declared You 1 find, I 1 and di of the scalp too--that ofthe boots reflected allt-itehing will stop, and feel a You .can get drug store. It four ounces is soldier js bravery tence" of blind « obedience The Russiat 1pplie sons during the J er boots, peclally in were side the trenches th ¥ fure went Nobody need fear the Jorden blamed bers of the Russian i y rtier and Salish story number neve } u tain boots, a battles,' The field" terviey ith these si Besides ing sign inning war mat AVOI upon d them said the supplied to ti Africa weather learned les panesd war, e trench di ng, but out 1y to South bad head of the German press bareau in 1914 is a severe loss to the cause of Pan-Germanism." In a recent number of Harper's Weekly Mr. Norman Hapgood gives a vivacious characterization of the man who has been called Germany's stormy petrel: "He was an odd little man, with a voice so bad it could hardly be un- derstood in college lecture-rooms. As 1 ua youth he had a natural tendency rder 9 ity | H " il fire, ¢ | towards learning, but an natural ten- to-da ti - th Lon somewl : ench comm : 1s effort to | dency also toward using his facts to cannot la 1 arged . so. ; ase their | prove what he liked to believe. After plan of | Bismarck's first great exhibition of included in | masterly wickedness, when he' tore Schleswig-Holstein away from Den- mark, the youthful Von Treitschke lost whatever liberalism he had and became excited over the possibilities of war, compulsion, aristocracy. . . Von Treitschke first popularized the idea that British naval supre- macy must be destroyed. In 1884 he said: 'We have reckoned with France, Austria and Russia; the YROF Abt dreside a Va reckoning with England has still to Honorary Presidents, W. F. Nickle, | James Spence, A. W. Wheatley, R. . proved |come; it will be the longest and the Jushell, R. D. Sutherland, A. Shaw, : general offensive in | MOSt difficult." , V. J. Dick and G. Pound; President, the soldiers, were to the effect that the west, ted his Von Treitschke sat in the Reichstag | jj. yrd Haririek; Vico-Presidents, 1. boots were ordered to be made a due + fact that instead and supported legislation to sup- Sleeth end George Vanhorn; cording to samples furnished by the | vi troo y other points press the Socialists, Poles and Catho- tary-Treasurer Reginald Crawford; Militia Department, that the sample we lit sist the army of ics. In every branch of politics he | Acsistant Manager, W. McFederid boots were good in material and Germans taught the gospel of crushing. Tho next meeting of the club will be construction and that the boots sup- --_------ hsld on April 19th. plied by manufacturers sub ---------------- stantially up to sample 'The Victoria Club. An enthusiastic of the Victoria 1} held in the parlor of the Y.M.C.A building on Monday hight. An exer; tionally large (lirnout was present, all ng anxious to together the way for Manager William the job as usual the boys wk the notice fo ted them 1 ke pres ent at this meeting. Mr. Mcle expressed his sorrow that Sorel Me Cammon, the veteran pitcher, who had always graced such meetings with his pr ice, had away. A high tribute paid to the deceased b Mr. McFederidge saying that he an old stand-by, through many superior m sr. meeting of the fans Jaschall Club was |g S---- marshal closed the! in gnificant word ' ma Ru exhausted ian THERE IS A DISTINCTIVE QUALITY APPEARANCE get ind terribl inner in ow ing be ing the m are fig the are and 0 so abl gladly wel responded to hich About SUN-KIST packages--just as distinctive as the quality of their contents. SU N-KIST Seeded and Secedless Raisins, GEO. ROBERTSON & SON, LTD. war ridge tinor ort petty party capi General Hughe 10 Pre to believe followed the had reason that ¢ a result ! f ots, a three-niil- ! , ! tep an Russia cancelled onclusion of Hughes peech the majority report latter was declared carried on a straight vil centre which party division he force a t. Mihiel draws its sup The findings of the majority .of the special committee of the Com-. Th yattle has not as vet mons which investigated the boots for (he yassed IF'parges British uier tated t he was of the the opmion ot was pulling out victory a hard contested during the past few years when the City. Baseball League has reached I_such a high state of proficiency ' election of lion from for Migs, game Canadi At the General tre ulted : I'ne oflicers re prelu expe =I Spring Suitings Large Selection to Choose From PY Prices Reasonable. have fron or perhaps front, and remains ements were A Question of Odors. Bob Burman, record holder in motorcar racing, tells the following story: | Recently I was talking with a'wo- | man whose husband had acquired considerable wealth suddenly and who was quite new to the social | world and its customs. She was | particularly anxious to appear as if accustomed to all the luxuries of life. She began a conversation with me on motoring. '"Have you APPOINT COMMISSION Further TO --_---- THE KRON PRINZ To Make In- Investigation "Which has entered Newport! News to Horse Buying. where the Prinz Eitel Friedrich € (Speci to the Whig.) cently interned Ottawa, April 13 No more hor 3 boots, binoculars or bandages PITH OF THE NEWS e committee work is over Par- . liament is going to-be prorogued as soon as possible A commission will be appointed on horses and Nova Scotia affairs will be further investigated Nova Scotia, where Mr Dewitt Foster, M.P., purchased being picked out as the most re- WILHELM Condensed Items By Telegraphic and From Exchanges Eight Chicago men were with misusing the mails Ihe St. Lawrence River is ice and ready for purchased your new | car this season?" I asked. "No, Mr. Burman. Not yet," she said. "I can't make up my mind just | nn charged clear of resumption of trai- fie. Marquis Jules Della Chisea, a bro- ther of Pope Benedict, is dead, ac cording to Reuter's Genoa corres- pondent, The scout cruiser few minor repairs, Smyrna to 'protect American interests in the Mediterranean. The death occurred on Sunday in Pleasant Valley, N.Y. of Donald Nicholson, former managing editor of the Chicago Tribune. John Middleton, Chester, after a will leave for > roderich township, a pioneer farmer of large holdings, and a public otlicial. for many years, prehensible of all the provinces from horse-purchase viewpoint. This morning in the Public counts Committee, Hon. J. D. who had represented the Govern- ment througheut, offered a resolu- tion from the Committee informing the Commons that the evidence tak- en in regard to the horse-huying in Nova Scotia warranted farther ac- tion and suggestin gthit a commis- sion be named F. B. Caverhill saw no reason why the investigation shoyld be confined to Nova Scotia when horses were bought in every province, but ton- sented to a rider that if further Reid, Ac-| "Why, 1 can't decide whether I | should get a gasoline car or a limou- sine car. Tell me, does limousine smell as bad as gasoline?" Cost of Firing Naval Guns. The guns used in the navy range from six inch to fourteen inch calibre of bore. The six inch gun carries a 100 pound shell; seven inch guns 165 pound shell, eight inch guns 250 pounds, ten inch gyms 500 pounds, twelve inch guns 850 pounds, thir- teen inch 1,100 pounds. To fire one which make of car to buy. Maybe g | you will help me." ! 2 | i "What is it that you cannot decide 4 : "en TE a S i about them?" I asked. : f Al ; RT. HON Premier Asj ritish Parlia Civil and Military Tailors, Princess and Bagot Sts. War, and died in his seventy-second year evidence were brought by reputable sat Rev. Pros. i. C. I"idgeon, Vancou- persons this also should be investi- ver, has been tendered a call to be | gated. * colleague pastor of Bloor Ww. PF street Presbyterian church, fered an Mrs. (Col John) Stacey necessity daughters, Gertrude and audit and inspection which will pro- of St. Thomas, were' accidentally tect the country from irregularities drowned at Niagara La Basa, Fiji and fraud." Islands. Ai representative of the J. L. Gar- Rev. Patrick White, Limerick, Ire- | land Company this morning refused land, 'has been ap pointod Fector of the | to tell the Committee the cost of Church of San Silbestro, the church | $7.000 worth of safety pins which for the English speaking Catholics in | Mr. MecLenaghan stated went into Rome. housewives which he sold the Gov The earnings of the ernment for the soldier Railway system from Chairfnan Morphy upheld Tth 'were $1,008, fusal. $33,040 , from. Prerogation is expected on Tiiirs- week last year. day. The Montreal Following the pa of the big guns using the shells and the explosives that would be used in battle costs from $477 to $720 for ach discharge, according to the size of the gun, but the cost in target practice is only about $250 each dis- icharge, because they use cheap shells and no explosives. The big guns are | used twice a year in target practice, the target for an eight inch gun at five mile range being 30 by 60 feet in size. ke { 1 volun. justified come Nickle, M.P., Kingston, of- amendment declaring the for "a system of purchase, Foronto and her Ruth, late On German . Acroplane With Rifle And Repulsed It. Rotterdam, April 13.--While in | the vicinity of North Hinder Light- {ship Sunday afternoon the steamer Serula of the Cork Steamship Com | pany, Liverpool to Rotterdam, was jattacked by two German aeroplanes Captain Sample Sharp, who had on | the bridge "an old Martini-Henri rifle for -explgding mines, fired at This uss ints, one of whom ultim- [ately cleared off with a damaged wing, Although the Captain does not claim that this was due to his rifle, he is certain that his firing caused the aviators to keep at. a higher altitude: and disturbed their aim, for not one of the 28 bombs {launched hit the ship, though most fell perilously near. Married At Fraonkville, The telephone, like the crane, multiplies Frankville, April 12.--At St. Thom- as' 'church, Frankville, on Thursday power. last, a quiet wedding took place, when Rev. W. G. Swayne, rector of The | Athens, united in marriage Miss Mar- {garet Gprtrude Hormick, you | daughter of Samuel Henry eT | Bornick, to Rev. Joseph Cantrell, | imcumbent of Mallorytown = Mission, { and son of Edward Arthur Cantrell, | Sheffield, England. The bride was given away hy { father, and was attired in blue { wearing the bridal veil { blossoms, and carried a bouquet of { white roses. The church was taste- | fully decorated and many friends at- | tended. , The happy couple will resida {at Bancroft, where the bridegroom is | appointed incumbent. The groom's gift to the bride was a gold pen- {dant and chain, set, with amethysts {and pearls. Prisoners of War. Already a large number of German prisoners have been taken by the {allies. In the Franco-German War of *1 1870, however, the shoe %as on the inther foot, for during that campaign ng "of Dr G {the French prisoners reached the ex- mercial Studies has been alliliated | Reid's motion, W. F. Nickle moved i ' 3 land 702.018 men. of FL.308 uiicers with Laval University, 'on such' @ resolution .which after some dis | oy my Pari n, y terms and conditions as were agreed cussion and with a few changes in {2 $9, i ote the BIE S0tiagh, and upon by the sohool and the adminis- | Wording was unanimoucly passed. jeer a ) eDfosente IntetHet o Leators Fi tie waifears sity. { iy adopted ft read ag follows: "That [terial ad of war are al- he rst ockers lattalion, lig Com y v FO fe Vi- | men strong, paraded in khaki uni- | dence, draw the attention of the Ways an embarrassment and a source forms before Lord Derby, their Com- | House to the necessity of the inaung- |of considerable worry and expense, mander, in Liverpool on' Monday, and | uration of a system of purchase, [though their numbers are frequently then marched between lines of cheer | audit and inspection which will gde- lessened by interchange of prisoners ing crowds to the quagely protect the country frofn ir-| | taken by the enemy. work. regularities and fraud, and that such | a A Near St. John's, Nfid., a repetition! legislation be enacted as will accom- . el cour a pre 2 | | Grand Trunk April 1st to 320.7 a decrease of the corre ponding his re School for High Com 830 It Multiplies Power. docks to being Iron Cross Popular. The Iron Cross was conferred the other day on hundreds of Londoners, : but not by the Kaiser. The crosses The' French have constructed alin question were an imitation of the gun to heat the German 42-centi- {German Iron Maltese cross and sold metre welpon. ion the Strand amd. other principal Many British warships on the Bel- | Boroug hfares for a penny apiece, in- glan coust have been damaged by (he |rluding a long piece of yellow ribbon. return-fire of the Germans. it a so much to several At least twenty-eight persons were [drivers that they purchased crosses killed 4nd more than 109 were and tied them around the necks of wounded in the Austrian air raid {their horses, and, when a bulldog One hundred and forty-six miles! Over Podgoritza last week. {Appeared in Trataigal Squate bet vill north of Toronto, on the line of the Albanian insurgents attacked Aus- | 3h iron crom dttac e oa i ar Grand Trunk Railway, nestles Hunts trian troopships on Lake Scutari Sat. Sher | of the deg Fas go ETalu a ville, and the Lake of Bays district. | urday, sinking two of them. 20 on Eaving such ea highly The region is replete with natural The famous Philharmonic Orches-|nima beauty and loveliness, and comprises tra of Berlin is preparing to make a some of the most beautiful water concert tour of Belgium early in May, ! stretches and picturesque landscapes; for which the vast portion of wnor- { thetn Ontario is becoming so famous, Here are lakes and winding rivers! Soldiers "At Belleville Were Carriers and islands innumerable water ab- solutely soft snd without any ad- mixture of minerals. The scenic grandeur of hill and mountain the placid beauty of the lakes, the lovely rivers with their pellucid waters flowing through banks of delighty- fully variegated fdliage,. are not sur- passed in any county. food hotel accommodation at rea- sonable rates. The Wawa at Nor- way Point accommodates 300 people. "'Sarsaparilla Tonic'! It is modern. in every respect. Hol CP. Rg for the - week | grogations to and cold water in cvery room. In ending April 1945. $1,766,000, proach. | addition to the numerous bathrooms compared with $2 ri year! Mave a eare lest yon persecute' in on each floor, there are forty private ago, thus showing deerQase olf the {bathrooms in connection with suites" $171, 000, > et telephone increases personal efficiency and enlarges the volume of business by. extending the field of the merchant's activity. of last year's sealing disaster, in |plish this purpose." which about 175 hugters perished on Mr. Nickle thought that the po- the ice floes, was narrowly averted sition of the Auditor-General would when 150 wen from the steamer have been stronger if he had drawn Neptune were rescued from the ice attention of the incoming Govern- by the Florizen. ment to the weakness of the Act and Frank Abarno and Carmine Carbone | the difficulties of lis situation. How- were found guilty by a jury in New ever he did not wish to cast an re York Monday night an the charge of | flection on the Auditor-General him-. having made and placed a bomb in | self." Patrick's Cathedral here on 2nd. The jury recommended clemency for both men. Hon. Dr. Reid moved in the Pub- lic Accounts Commitee, and it was ----g tarried, that the Department of Jus- tice be instructed to enforce restrie- tion in the matter of binoculars, and take such further proceedings as the law permits. At Washington, ° Secretary MeAdoo, of the Treasury, and Comptroller of | the Currency John. Skelton Williams were made defendants in proceedings begun, in the District of Columbia Su me Court by the Riggs National ank of Washington, D.C, which al oes that thess officials. Nats combia- to. wreck that institation. Late John Culbert, Brockville. (Special to the Whig) Brockville, April 13.--John Culbert, ex-M.P., for many years resident and business man of this community, died suddenly here to-day. He was twice Mavor of this city He leaves one § Dnehters Mrs. Mint. ------ War Tidings, If the modern business man had to travel every time it was necessary to have a personal talk with a customer or business associate, he would be in the position of a builder without a crane. . Are you using the telephone as you should --systematically applying it to the needs of your business? her silk, and orange Lake Of Bays. Barred Out. An old gentleman by the nmne of | Page, finding a young lady's glove at 2 Spvilar resurt, Presented It 10 ber {towards the latter part of which no If from your glove you take the let. | hopes were held out for his recovery, ter G !8. R. Gorman, Belleville, the well known hoot and shoe merchant pass- ed away on Saturday The late Stephen Robinson Gormen was six- IN DETENTION CAMPS. After an illness of some duration The telephone, especially the long dis- tance service, makes possible real economy, and with it a greater, not a lower, efficiency. A careful study of the subject will repay you. Ofr Meningitis Germs, : April 13.--After a bacters Your glove is love, which I devote to « i thee test, some Hhirtvdwo mem. : bers of the 34th Battalion; stationed ate he lady returned the Tol ERD or Ee En in this eity, hve been piaced in. a . . born_in Toledo. Ont detention camp at the Fair Grounds. 'f fom our Page: you fake the let. | Miss Ann Elizabeth Slaven, who They found to be carriers of iw i ' in the early days was a teacher in : ! 0 ¢ that won't do \ 3 ye . spinal meningitis gens. No i is age, and t td Prince Edward County and later cases have been developed. . principal of a school in San Francls-| : ied, was run down in that city in {October last and has been in the hospital ever since with no prospects of recoxery. Miss Annie Hartley, Brgntiord, has name of Him 'who was persecu- {oem appointed matron of the Uni- Forduis Pre, versity of Tereato Base Hospital, Belleville, iologist "i were "Every Bell Telephone is a Long Distance Station." The Bell Telephone Co. of Canada. new at Gibson's, Few clergymen expect their con. practice what they at Gibson's, * "Sarsaparilla Tonic 4