Daily British Whig (1850), 25 Jun 1915, p. 12

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BE dn hen A __PAGE TWELVE = M [ though he is in care of a nurse. | {© Theve ig a good story of crowe | THE DOV OF PEA ' when he wag Viceroy of Ireland. | LORD | MOI nt Ca Crossing the channel one day, an old | rs PRESIDENT OF COUNCIL | friend, who had kmown him from | ARE TOLD THAT THE WAR MUST IN NEW CABINET. I boyhood--the Duchess of Manches- | GO ON. -- | ter--came aboard, and without ris-| He Was Former)y Viceroy of Ireland | ing to grom ver, Re beckoned to ber Jane Adams Finds That Meditation --A Story. to come and sit bes im. - | , : _ Kpeninc oy A Wt the Duchess of | though he was viceroy she was rath- | Would Not Be Welcomed Now , | er astonished, but she followed eti- | Decisive Result First. . | quette and -for three hours kept to| London, June 25.--The firm senti- Ah tie new British ministry Te- | her place. [ment prevails in all the belligerent has 7 Sfited the Marquis of Crewe | "the moment they were om ghore | nations that the war must be pushed Councty %; «ord President of the at Holyhead, however, he was noth- [to a decisive victory, according to porta t bl le has held -many im-) ie but an everyday peer of the Miss Jane Addams, who . just re- and aa J aces through many years, realm, and she said briskly: "Here, | turned to London from a visit to the skilled ently 4 statesman and a Robin, bring me my dressing bag, | warring countries on the Continent. . | i d | In an intervie , Miss Ad- His father was the Lord | 2nd Tun ahead like a good boy an W- yesterday, Miss Ad late i secure me a compartment in the dams told of seeing the heads of the Houghton, go honored and beloved | 4 00% | various Governments, who, while THE DAILY BRITISH Witte, FRIDAY, JUNE 95, 1918, BATTLESHIPS NAMES, hspiring Records of Famous Ships In the British Navy. The "crack" ships in the Britis¥ davy are those which bear names that have been passed from ship to ship for centuries and with which Are bound up many famous tradi- tions. The Lion, for instance, which played a prominent part in the re- cent North Sea "scrap," can trace its descent back to the time when that grim sea-dog Blake swept the seas of the Dutch. Few battleships have had so curious a history as the first Inflexible, the vessel of that mame which figured in the Falkland Is- lands battle being the fifth of her line. The first wag building at Que- that his son Robert was at the first | taking note of the efforts of the wo-| bée when the A.derican war broke From a recipe of Charies Fran- accepted on trust, ' men of America and other nations|out. By skilful engineering the| Cuil, Chief Cook fo Gn 'Gladstone had him sent as Vice- v NTIOS for meditation, actually held out no| skeleton of the battleship was cut Oe techie 4508. MONKEY A) hy ' Coan TOY to Ireland, and about this time | hope that they would be successful.| into pieces and shipped in thirty of red currants, and he married the daughter of Lord | I ¥ v | \ Of [In every country visited, Miss Ad- Rosebery, Lady Margaret Primrose, | The Orang Outang Is a Creature | dams said, sh t { . and ghe has become one of the most | Great Imitative Ability | orities willing to aes o, LiSh auth | orities willing to listen to any peace devoted mothers to a little son and { Ia hotels and private houses of | proposal that might be made, but heir, born to them after twelve years | India monkeys have been found that | no indication was given that any of marriage. Lady Crewe's moth- were trained to wait at table, bring-| movement In that direction would be er. was a Rothschild, and left her a {ing dishes and articles of food in. a | of avail, | more or less mechanical way. | Miss Addams and Miss Hamilton, | The story of the talented orang! hoth of Hull House, Chicago, and outang of Buffon, the naturalist, is | half-a-dézen women from Holland, classic. This creature gave visitors | all of whom were delegates to the re- his arm, walked with them, showed | cent Women's Peace Congress at The them to the door, ate with a knife | Hague, were fore he| they were doing was admirable, al- drank it. | though at #his time misdirected. An orang outang at the Jardin, They called upon Chanceller von des Plantes in Paris regularly un- Bethmann-Hollweg and Gottlieb von locked with a key the door of the | Jagow, Minister of Foreign Affairs Compartment he occupied, opened! in Berlin, and while they were lis- the door, locked it on the other side | tened to attentively, they were in- after he had entered and then hung | the key on a nail. {the war to the bitter end. Flourens relates that he once vis- In. Paris, Premier Viviani and For- ited the Jardin des Plantes in com- (eign Minister Delcasse expressed pany with an aged scholar whose ap- | sympathy with the women who are formed that Germany must Parsee; longboats to Lake Champlain, and bruise stones and kernels in a was grafted together again 4n four weeks, and twelve days later parti- cipated in a sea battle. The third and fourth Inflexible gained honors for thelr name in the China and Egyptian wars, The name Donegal, now borne by one of our fast cruisers, first came to be given to a British ship in a dram- atic fashion. In 1798 the Hoche ap- peared in' Donegal Bay with ships of the French squadron to attack our shores. She was a two-decker with eighty gums, and was the flagship of Commodore: Bompart. A portion of the British fleet engaged the Heche and riddled her like a sieve until she was compelled to haul down her flag and be towed into Plymouth _Harbor, To commemorate the victory "the Dame of the captured vessel was changed from Hoche to Donegal, and she fought gallantly with Nelson in later years. The second Donegal Which served in the British fleet will 80 down to history as one of the very last of our old wooden ships. mortar ; place in small pre- pan with | 1b. John 8 sugar loafe and 3% ng-water ; boil on the stove-fire about five minutes, NE care 10 remove scum as Fruit put up right, with Rea Extra Granul. ated Sugar, will keep as long as you wish, and when opened a month or a year hence will delight you with its freshness and flavor, 2 sweeten it." your supply of sugar in Original REDPATH Packages, and thus be sure of the genuine-- Canada's favorite sugar, at its best. Put up in 2 and 5 Ib, Sealed 10, 20, 50 and 100 Ib, Bags. CANADA SUGAR REFINING Co., LIMITED, MONTREAL. pearance greatly interested this or-| trying to end. the war, but affirmed ang outang, which was at large in| that the struggle must go on until] The British 18,000-ton Dread- the rooms of the institution. The | the Allies win. nought, the Temeraire, bears a name scholar wore old fashioned clothes, It was the same in Austria-Hun-] fanfbus in naval history for centuries one article of which was a tall hat|gary, where they saw the Prime|Phst. It was originally borne by one with a wide brim. He was mueh | Minister and also the Minjster of[of Louis the Fourteenth's men-o'- | bent from age and in walking sup-| foreign Affairs, and again in Italy| War, and' the name Temeraire was ported himself with g heavy cane. |where they had an audience with | famous in 'the French navy for When the two men were about to| Premier Salandra and his foreign | ninety years. A Temeraire first fig- depart the hat and cane of the old | minister. ured in the British service as a prize man were missing. Presently the] ---- of war. A famous painting of Tra- orang outang was seen tottering Germany Versus Japan. falgar' pictures the Fighting Temer- THE MARQUIS OF CREWE. [through the room, his back bent ar « A German paper makes some | #ire, which fought at the side of the fortune of $10,000,000. spn ost double, wearing the hat upon|snéering remari about "Britain's | VIEOry in the historical encounter, "witty and Into. | Mie head and walking stiffly b " -| and in memory of that time the mod. very beautiful, witty ang 4 tellec. | nd walling stiffly by the | yellow Allies," meaning the Japan tual, and Sar or aly hoe aid of the cane.--Chicago Herald, | ese, ern Temeraire is known *monsit the She was married, while the Marquis ------ "| 5, Bir Claude Macdonald, who was fit to-day as the "Fighting ; | Temmy." was 23 years older than she, Evidently Some Mistake, | the time af rpniative in Japan at The battleship Invincible can Lord Crewe had been previously Lindle | y M. Garrison, secretary of | tifi . boast a long Hlne of ancestry, for it Rartied x a daughter of Sir Fred- war, smiled the other evening when | ities to the TAmaniT 1 the Japan. is tle eighth of its name. The fourth i raham of Netherby. There the conversation turned to the sub- | Russia. "The whole world," he says Invincible lives in history as the ] re hee daughters and a son born | ject of dreams, He sald he was Te- | knows with what splendid valor our famous fighting vessel which sank lo 8 union, but the boy died short- | minded of an incident that happened Allies f ht, b i countless ships during the French y after his mothers' death Lord N h | es fought, but it is not known as Grover + Lord in New England, | generally as I think it ought to be|®0d Spanish wars. On one occasion ne e is a poet, and his beautiful Some years ago a party named | yop straightforward, honest and dig- the Invincible was so battered dur- yerses, "Seven Years," are a|Brown had a dream, and the thing so | ified, and how loyal ing an action off Ushant that Lord touching reminder of his: griet. fo |i | conduet op JO¥. loyal to us, was the the ref In| impressed him that he gave a detall- | conduct of heir negotiations. it is| Howe sent two vessels to tow it ou} on 088 of hig wife and son. Before ed account of it to several of his| not generally known how apprevia- | Of the fighting line. Captain Paken- ts cond marriage Robert Milnes | friends, .. a | tive of the stubborn valor of their | Dam scornfully refused the proffered ) oF Crewe) Was creater a Knight | By the way, Jim," he remarked opponents, how courteous and chival-| YOW-rope, - and - angrily demanded 0 The rder of the Bath, i<4 to an acquaintance one afternoon, | rous to them in their own sufferings, | MOT€ aminunition and wads and Hole London family house is Crevet id 1 tel Jou about thie dream I had | were the 'heathen' Japanese. It is|Shot-hole stoppers, eet, Mayfair, | the other aight?' not known, perh ' BR rT latocratie heericlusive contre of ary. Na, Eadont think you did." res. that fullest information - reserains Bull Swims the Foyle, istocratie society. The name of | ponded the other, "What w t oy ey eaclety. HY rome yrod! [Dondad as It| wounded Russians in the hospitals of | 'A remarkable scene which attract. 0 n|J8Pan, for transmission to their|éd the attention of thousands of peo- cach May an.tat was held there oP TIN ASMRSd that I was in heaven," | trionds, was tpamamioO! obtainable, ed at Derry recently. Chiaties a ay a ay the time o Town, with a reflective the nature apd gravity of the wounds rge heérd of cattle were be- } x arlands were hung on | expression. On one side there was a and in some cases even the tempera- | ing drivel towards the pens a young A maypole, and there was a merry | piano playing. On the other there | ture of the Patient being telegraph- away from the main and noisy celebration, was a cornet. Not far away there ed. ite the Guildhall and oY hen Lady Peggy Crowe's little | was a phonograph, while just beyond "I venture, therefore, to think that ards the wharf. The : a Jem. Douths ad the Durbar again there was a vio--" some Christian nations, not forgett- | men rudhied after it, but when the 100 i a Jini, ndia, but she Ou must have been mistaken, ing Germany, have much to learn of | Aimal rekched the quayside it jump- 1tued 0 accompany her husband. | old man," impressively broke in the the 'Christian virtures of chivalry, | ed Into the fiver and began to swim é Would not Jeave the smal Lord | other, That wasn't heaven."-- courtesy, and honesty from heathen | 40wn Strewm. Houghton, and she would hot risk | Philadelphia Telegraph. Japan." 'Some men quickly procured a row epi the change of climate for him. It boi f . ------ at, but' before they got off the bull she goes to a luncheon party her Liquor may keep a man down, was out if the Semis of the iy child goes too, 80 that she can oc. | but the fellow who drinks to excess Many a girl has lost her beau' by atid g ® . © When th e boat- casionally have a look at. him, al- | is pretty sure to get a head, having too many strings to him. men rons. Was considerably | For than half-way across the Foyle, and, seeing that it would be more convenient to get it out at the shore on the Waterside, they headed 4m that direction. - After nearly half {an hour the animal touched land at St. Columb's. Point, after a swim al- _ymost half a mile in length. Straight- wily it. began to gallop along the Midland Railway line, but was soon overtaken, and then allowed itself to be driven 'quietly back to the herd. 5 ---- ;- Makes a Healthy Appetite One for Breakfast- He an ' he ; . ! . 2 lated at' a basaar at Hawarden by i y the - Rev. Stephen Gladstone, He : spoke of the mission church which tn : > ' \ = 8 Was origifially established at Sandy-| N didi "gy aay draft, and. sald his 'mother and two NB => 4a H \ sisters took a great Interest in jt. ! # 4 He \ : / ; One 'day lis" mother arrived at Ha. { Hint i warden Castle minus her boots, and d ond thom "Oper hs ad Reson t|- shies (Help Appetite and Digestion WRIGLEY'S comes in two delicious flavors. Beneficial, economical, gf : 'Made clean -- kept clean -- sealed §, air-tight against all impurity, pr. in the * a --

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