Daily British Whig (1850), 30 Sep 1915, p. 4

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

PAGE FOUR The British (Whig | 82ND YEAR. | the | man of THE DAILY B soldiery favour it. Stranzest of all is endorsed by Dr. Goodnow,of Johns | Hopkins College, who has been the personal advisor of the President of Chinese Republic. THE MEN THAT RISE. The surprise is that progressive every young tendencies does | not eagerly embrace the opportunity Published Dally und THE BRITISH WHIG C€O., LIMITE J. G. Elliott Teman A. Gulld Semi-Weekly by PUBL ING résident | Director Business Editorial Job Office . SURSCRIP (Dally Edition) One year, delivered in city One year, If pald in advance One year, by mail to rural offices One year, to United States . (Semi-Weekly Edition One year, by mall, cash $ One year, if not pald in advance.$ One year, to United Btates $ Six and three months pro Rooms 1.0 1.60 1.60 recta. Attached printing o "TORONTO F H. E. Emallpie U. 8 RF s one of the best job es, in. Canada NTATIVE 2 Church St. | 1VES New York Frank Chioago Fran 25 Fifth Ave. | Manager Trihune Bldg. | Manager R. NortWrip, x BR "Northrnn, | er, | hardest | sought RARE SCHOOL EXHIBITS. The exhibition of pictures at the Fair suggests that the schools of | Kingston should have an annual dis- play. Itzwould give some indica- tion of what is being taught, and af- | ford a delight pleasure to the friends of the scholars. The writer | of this article some years ago visited | an exhibition which the Picton school | children made, and he received an impression that has not passed away, | He thought then, and he thinks still, [ that, without any expense practically | a collection could be made of the work of the pupils,.and one the value of which would be mable. It is recalled that in a certain west ern city, in the same building as the public library, and below the reading and consulting rooms, there is a per- manent exhibit of the. work of the schools and from the Art, the Domes- tic and Household Science, and Man- ual Training Departments, and every one who is interested in it is guided as expeditiously as possible in this di- rection gndsallowed to feast his eves upon it. The difference between the two cities is this--that in one the people appreciate the exhibit and the trustees foster it, and in the other the public appreciation is ilissing, and the trustees are lacking in the enterprise and energy which are to be expected from them. Kingston, let us repeat, has in the achools the teaching that should be exemplified in the handiwork of the icholars, and this handiwork should be collected ahd properly arranged, and constitute wn exhibit which should prove a rare attraction. Kingston's appraisal df it- should induce the trustees and the teachers to co-operate in the collection of arti- cles from the Domestic Science, the Art and the Manual Training De- partments, one that will represent them worthily and demonstrate their usefulness. and simply inesti CHINA A MONARCHY. The change in' China, from a .re- public to a monarchy, - will be a €reat disappointment to the United States, the people of which had flat tered: themselves that the Chinese had been inspired by the success of their form of Government. "The re- bellion against the Manchu dynasty was of long duration, It had shown evidence of decadence 'for many years. Its fall was due to the ac- tivity of one Sun Yet San, who, be- ing of bold and an adventurous spir- it, led the way tovands Je foundi of the republic with Yuan Shi-Kai as its President. The Republic seemed to meet the requirements of the hour, and it fol- towed without any remarkable agita- tion on the part of the people. Al ready, however, it has disappointed even those who: were instrumental - in setting. it up. Two great consider. ations weighed with them, Ome was the need of a strong man at the head of the Government, and with great- ér powers than Yuan Shi-Kai seem- ed"to possess, an Emperor, iff Tact, assuring the people of an uninterrup- - tod redgn. Another was the fear of a digruption of the Republic when the President's term of office expir- ed, without any one in sight of his 'temperament apd decision of charac- ter. A third reason was the inoap- acity of the present undevdloped Government, to cope with an aggres- 'gressive Japanese movement, the meaning of which was expressed in the recent agreement, or surrender, since China was not in a position to refusé the Japanese anything. All these things have combined to creatd the impression that a monar- chy headéd by a man of the Yuan Shi-Kal type would be to the advan- tage of China, and the officials and . ; | evening study? | labor leaders. | difficult ly business matter. to acquire a'l the education he can, realizing 'that it means hig material welfare. evidences that education pays. With out it there can be no advancement, no rapid rise in usefulfess, and no pronounced success. No for Is that the plea? old grandfather On every hand there are time The grand of | Lloyd-Gearge could have said that he had not the time from his cobbling to study, in order that he might coach his grandson and ward; and vet the old man studied hard in or Ider to inspire his most promising i boy To-day he is the proud man as he contemplates in Lloyd-George one of Britain's foremost and a saviour of the nation. M. Schwab could have plead ed that he had not the time, in his youth, for study, after he got home from the great steel work in which he labored. But saw in him the makings of a great man and encouraged him in the study which fitted him for promotion in for the occupies to-day. leaders, Chas his service and position which he He is one of America's captains of indus try Keir Hardie, who has just passed away, made no excuses because he had to study when, as a Scotch min- he found himself up against the of tasks He persistently light and information and into one. of the greatest He dure, and understond betimes, but he was always brave and high-mind developed was to | ed and honest. I Every great man has his feeble be ginnings. He finds the foundation for his greatness in the simple life | and in the studious habits which he | cultivates He 'has risen by great exertions, and he could not have ris- {en at all but for the schoolings he obtained by a great sacrifice of what we call ease and pleasure. ---- dr EDITORIAL NOTES. Bernier and Stefansson have been staking out territory for Canada away up in the Arctic region, This is very kind of them, buf what is the value to the country of all this] you think Helen's friend was? 'waste of water and ice and land? ------ ces teenie The Washington story, that the American syndicate that has taken over the Anglo-American loan will net out of its munition contracts four | hundred millions of dollars, seems to be a fiction . _Its authorship can traced to some German beer salo The parents of the children are in- vitéd to visit Victoria School. It has cost more per room than the best and newest schools in Winnipeg. They should inspect the laboratory outrage, which is being continued, and without any sign of remedy. Australia has a deficit this year of $250,000,000. This deficit will cons tinue fo grow. The war must be carried to a finish, but with as much economy as possible, In Canada, as well as in Australia and in the Moth- er Country, this economy must pre- vail. That is the point that will be sent home with stunning effects at once. A Youngstown, Ohio, doctor, fast- ed forty-seven ddys in 1914, in a con- test with death. This year he fast- ed for thirty-one days, in a demon- stration of his theory that it is essen- tion to Another proof that people eat alto- gether too much. be human plant cannot consume, the materials th which it is glutted. After the war broke out the bapk- ers of Buffalo negotiated a German loan, and no one thought anything about it. It was regarded as a pure- But the 'Ani hostile way, and the even threatened to d@ Hun spirit again, and it is usually vulgar form. > wi The Central Patriotic Fund, 'ad ministered from Ottawa, must be in- creased to $6,000,000 this year in order to continue the relief which is called for by the exigencies dt war. What is Kingston going to do about supplementing its contribution this fund? The city and the county councils, representing the whole peo- ple, should pledge a certain sum per month. . * Sr ---- . . Judge Parker. of Albany, N.Y. and distinguished by having once as- pired to the Presidency of the Unit ed States, was too busy the other day to visit Toronto and accept 6f an hon- orary university degree. He had a similar honor frofh another college. Perhaps he thought he had enough of these gifts. He may not exactly despise them, but he does not appre- ciate them or their value in practical life. Like the military titles, these college titles are becoming too nu- merous. The colonels and the doc- tors will be altogether too common after a while, : Ti) | it Andrew Carnegie] x long life and good health. | to | RITISH WHIG, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1915. PE ------ | PUBLIC OPINION | Perea. Canada's Need. (Brantford Courier.) Canada has much greater need of machine guns just now than she has! of machine politicians. « War Is Profitable. (Grain Growers' Guide.) War may be hell, as General Sher- man said, but it certainly is proving very profitable to the sgcean steam | ship combine. | o | So It Would. (Guelph Mercury.) "Confound their politics" would sound mighty tame to the soldier in the trench who has a nose full of German poison gas, A Canadian Loan. (Monetary Times.) The Monetary Times predicts that within the next six months Canada will offer a Government loan to in | vestors in this country, | Already Fired. i (Montreal Mail.) Holland is constantly "wolf" by reporting heavy firing in the Narth Sea. All the German navy seems likely to fire is von Tirpitz. crying Handy to Have. ; (Hamilton Herald.) } There are going to be plenty of young Canadians, armed with wrist watches, who will be eager to tell the | Kaiser "the time of day," if they run across him. . A Heavy Tax, (Hamilton Times.) William Waldorf Astor, formesly of New York, ought to prize his Brit ish citizenship highly. He had to pay |a-high price for it. Mr. Astor will be required to pay about $1,250, M00 income tax. No Reservation. (London Advertiser.) Vell, if Sir Sam did say he cou'd | raise a million men, if need be, he | Was not so foolish as to limit the time between sunrise and sunset, as | William Jefnings Bryan did, in mak- | | ing a similar announcement. Which the Worse. ' (Ottawa Journal.) At first the Zeppelin looke d worse | | ed to be the ruling price. { rived in the city to-day..Bveérything | Hamiltow Herald | mostly | subject | circle {than thé submarine, them the sub- marine looked worse than the Zep- { pelin, now the Zeppelin looks-worse {than the submarine, and Theither seems to amount to shucks except for common murder. Ford's Appreciation. (Toronto Mail.) Three clerks in Henry Ford's em- ployment who conspired to rob him of several thousand dollars have been sentenced by their employer to a rise in wages. This seems harsh, |but is a raithful reflexion of Mr. Ford's rental processes. An Early Election. (BeHeville Ontario.) An election now, when the life of Parliament has over a year to run, can not be other than a confession on the part of Sir Robert Borden that he ™s unable to give the coun- try the leadership and the Govern- ment it requires and demands 5 STON EVENTS 25 YEARS AGO To day the cheese business was so | stow the factorymen felt discourag- | ed. The cause given for the un-| | healthly state of the market is that dealers in England who purchased July cheese at 7 3-4¢ are now push- ing itgen the market, and the supply is more than equal to the Semand. The August and September makes are not wanted and 'consequently on- ly 91-2¢. is offered when 11c. show- . Twenty four loads of freight ar- is rushing in railway circles. Ford's Noisy Talk. Much too much is made of the say- ings of Henry Ford, the automobile man. He speaks oracularly on many subjects and what he says is receiv- ed with reverence---yet most of his talk shows him to be a man who has thought but little. His ideas are half-baled. But it's a way with our neighbors; let a man but succeed somehow in making millions, either by speculation or legitimate industry, and his opinions on every from the squaring- of the to the song the sirens sang are received with profound respect. The oracular multi-millionaire is a nuisance. A A A AA A AA A | Sleepytime Tales | N LITTLE CHATTEXER. | Once upon a time Helen called to | her little friend to-come over and | have lunch with her Now who do I twill tell you. It was a little gray | squirrel that lived in the park next to Helen's home. Every day Helen would go to the door and call: "Chat- terer, Chatterer, come and play wth me," and in a minute a pair of bright | eves would be seen, and soon a bushy [ tail, and then Chatterer would. come and sit on his hind legs beside Helen and eat the peanuts she had for him. After the squirrel had eaten all he wanted he would curl up in a round ball in Helen's lap and go fast asleep. As a great treat Helen gave her little friend peanut butter . spread very * thick on a piece of bread but Chat- f terer did not eften eat the bread but ate all the peanut butter and then drop the bread in Helen's lap and look up at her as much as to say: "Some more of that nice tasting stuff, please" and of course the squirrel al- ways got some more, . One night, after Helen went to bed, she heard a noise at the window and in a minute Chattérer hopped in, jumped up on her bed and began to stare at her with his bright eyes. When Helen woke in the morning Chatterer was gone and when she began to dress she found one of her stockings had gone, too. When she told her mother about her visitor and the logs of her stocking, she said she was sure Chatterer had carried it to his nest. ema so mommy * "Low Cost of Living" Menu Menu for Friday BREAKFAST Canteloupe Soft Bolled Eggs Squash Muflins Grape Jelly. Coffee LUNCHEON Potato €howdes White Hread Flum Jam. Orange Cookies : Cocon DINNER Old Fashioned Codfish Pie Creamed Potatoes. Lima Beans Canteloupe Preserve Iced Fears ( BREAKFAST. Squash Muffins--Put two thirds of a cup of cooked squash into a bowl. Add a quarter cup of sugar, one well beaten egg, two cup and three quar- ters of flour, half a teaspoon of salt, three teaspoons of baking - powder; and two tablespoons of melted but- ter. Mix and bake in buttered gem pans twenty-five minutes. LUNCHEON. Orange Cookies--Beat five minutes one fourth of a cup of butter, three fourths of a cup of sugar and one egR. Add one fourth of a cup of érange juice and three cups of flour ~~ n n that has been sifted with two tea spoons of baking powder and the grated rind of one orange. Roll very thin, cut, and bake in a moder- ate oven. Plum Jam--Stone the phims and boil forty minutes. Add three fourths of a pound of sugar to every pound 'of plums, and one fourth of the kernals blanched and pounded. Boil twenty minutes dnger. Pour in- to jars and cover hot. DINNER. Old-Fashioned ° Codfish Pie -- Line a baking dish with two crusts of rich paste and bake. Remove the upper crust and fill with the cod- fish prepared as follows: Flake and freshen one strip of fish. Cut an onion in pieces and boil until done. Boil one cup of milk, thicken with a tablespoon of dissplved flour, add the fish and onions, a tablespoon of but- ter and a little pepper, Serve very 'het. } Canteloupe Preserve--Half ripe canteloupes, pare and seed. Cut in small pieces and for every. three pounds allow two pounds of sugar. Let this stand three' hours and then boil until the . syrup is thick .and fruit is tender. Just before remg- ing from the fire add the juice of two lemons. 7 ippling Rhymes The gifted wearied out his public speakers: the gratitude of but he becomes than twelve of 'friends; again, weigh the sense, you or your screed, and all your work inviting. SE WASTE OF WORDS ~ him rumble, growl and screech for weary hours toge- ther; we murmur, as the moments pass, "His lungs are surely made of brass, his larynx is of leather." In order to express a thought he springs five miles of , tommyrot, of words that he hates to cease to spou of guff, until they are just bless the shearers. No long oration is a treat; a man may have a voice as sweet statesman makes a speech; we hear -- See Bibby"s Nobby $4.50 Shoes. ate See Bibby's Nobby $4.50 Shoes. Bibbys LIMITED, MEN'S AND BOYS' WEAR. THIS STORE HAS NO BAITS, BUT EXTRA VALUES. BIBBY'S RAGLAN OVERCOATS AT $15.00 Are beauties. Nothing to touch these coats elsewhere for less than $18.00. The Young Fel- low's Coat. MOTHERS ! We invite mothers to visit our Boys' Clothing Department. Special fitting room for choldren, with every convenience; Bibbys New Fall Suits We've a regular Suit Feast of chioce and ex- clusive styles. May we show vou? We have the Best Suits, made by the best mak- ers we know anything about. It would of talk to do them justice. Compare our any to be had anywhere-- garment for fabric' for: fabric. Then compare prices, and you will eertainly buy vour take miles Suits with garment-- Do this Fall Suit here. \ 7 SEE OUR $15.00 Blue Suits. SEE OUR $15.00 Scotch Tweed Suits a LOSSES OF THE HUNS IN RUSSIAN CAMPAIGN CONTINUE TO PILE UP. | The Rivers Run Red With Blood - i The €zar's Forces Are Sending! Prisoners to the Interior. { Petrograd, Sept. 30.--Dvinsk ap-| pears to be the main objective of | German and Austrian troops employ- ed in this northern battlefield. They hurling attack after attack against the defenses of the city, but the Rus-| sians have thus far been successful | in repulsing them. The Austrians have been given the hardest task, but | the Germans as well, are incurring | heavy losses, especially in the maze] of lakes west of Dvinsk, and along | the Dvina River. Officers say that | they have often seen the waters: of! the Dvina turn from pale brown to crimson, after frenzied attempts of the Austrians to cross, have been frustrated by the Russians. A great quantity of captured shells have been. received in Riga. . Oniy) citizens who have lived in Riga since July 1st, 1914, are allowed to: remain in the city, public hack driv-! ers taking others away to towns in| the interior. , Minsk is full of troops, | are arriving daily. : Three thousand prisoners, includ- ing sixty-two officers; captured in the | fighting around Dubno and Tarno. pol, passed through Kiev in the last two days. Within a fortnight 60, | 000 men and 1,500 officers, Aus-| tralian and German prisoners, have | gone through that city. The Ger-| mans are encountering great hard-! ships in Pripet marshes, their heavy! guns and transport lorries sinking in! the mud. . Soft Roll lapels, English models; very-smart. a ike a great camp. Many refugees | The "Fox" Seeks Cover. Toronto Mall | Bulgaria's assurance of the Trinle Entente powers that she contem- plates no aggressive action is a very| satisfactory development of the Bal-| kap situation. Of King Ferdinand s| determination to aid the Austrians! and Germans, if they were able to mass a force on the Serbian frontier | large enough to ensure their domin- ance in the Balkans, there is little doubt. The utterances of the Ger- man newspapers speak plainly on this point. The Russian successes, showing that the Czar's troops are in condition for an immediate.offensive combined with evidence that the Al- lies have in the Levant ample mil:- tary power to cope with a German attempt to drive through, to Turker, bave made the pro-German Bulgar- ian Government hesitate. Thesprompt og ¥ Macedonia in defiance of S3:- bia. If the Allies' ign in the 'west continues, as it promises to do, Germany will have need for all the troops at her command without un- dertaking diversions toward Con- stantinople. s ] have no: bearing; and how! t! He cannot see he's audience despairing. When will our learn that brevity will always earn hearers ?. Let speeches all be shorn short~enough, and we will as mockingbirds or linnets, ry bore if he is elocusing more r fifteen minutes. Condense, 'my condense; don't let the words out- in speeches or in writing; boil down the folks wh hear or read will find < | a drea ---------- How About Armenia? Collier's Weekly. Germany is the {and of the Christ- mas tree, and Wilhelm IT has long | been noted for his piety and ser. mons. . Germany is in alliance with Turkey and thre Kaiser's officers are in command of the forces there. One | of the largest Christian elements in. Turkey is the Armenian, and } people are robbed and murder. || ed with the thost infernal cruelty. It is. high time the German Govern- | ment told the rest of the world what pressure is brought to bear on ey to Hor} these SHU and are La. good Christians as Wilhelm's Prus- mobilzation of the Greek army alo!) rshowed Bulgaria she could not in- -|solently and with a high arrogance rian Ministers o German views 5 Bave led to a Cabinet crisis at Sofia. SEE OUR $18.00 Fancy Cheviot Suits. SEE OUR $18.00 Plaid Worsted Suits -Tartan 7 READY TO TRY ON. Finished to your order in a few hours, We'll fit vou perfectly. SEE OUR $15.00 Young Men's Suits B ibbys 78-80-82 Princess Street in. ee Men's $4.00 Boots « There area lot of me that we wish to see. They will find it to their advantage our line of Shoes at. this price. # OUR SPECIAL CALF BLUCHER BOOT, GOOD- YEAR WELT AND DOUBLE SOLE AT THIS PRICE IS A WINNER. n who wear $4.00 Shoes to look over J. H. SUTHERLAND & BRO The Home of Good Shoes. Price Price acres acres acres ,... acres acres acres acres acres acres acres acres acres Price Price Price Price Coal Matter Be- fore You Buy Just agk your neighbors about Our Coal, ' Our Methods, Our Service They will tell you that our coal is satisfying our methods Square--our service perfect. ICrawfords Foot of Queen Street. Phone 9. sees seen . . Eee Discord and anger among Bulga- the obviously pro- | si King Ferdinand General Cremer, a French explo- ves expert, was badly wounded dur ing experimental detonations at Sale" (9%. He may not recover. | < « # 4 eh

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy