Daily British Whig (1850), 19 Nov 1915, p. 3

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HL 3 EN TS KINGSTON, ONT. LETTERHEADS ENVELOPES SU MENTS ! F = BEST'S DOLLAR | Tooth Brush : 27 Tooth Powder Glycerine Soap Trench Balm Cold Tablets Gum Cigarettes Thront Tablets s Sh Adhesive Tape Lead Pencil Playing Cards L770 All useful articles fof the Boys at the From, only $1.00 for all | Best's The Popular Drug Store. Open Sundays. IMOTHER TOLD TO HIM H | . ' I Soldiers' Packag i || present Visiting friends in {/on the steamship Scandinavian, and! || the Belgian woman, coming to Can-|% Ii ada to KILLED BEFORE HER EYES Pte. ). Naillie, Visiting A 1s THE "WILLY-BOYS" | [i | Joyceville, Tells Story ® TO BE LONESOME. | | } | Ottawa, Nov. 19.---The young man who still turns a deaf ear to the appeal that is being made to-day for recruits to fight for the Empire is going to have a tough time in Ottawa this win- ter. The following letter which was received this morning by ' the committee ! directing the { The Woman Came Out to Canada-- # campaign for the 77th shows i fo 2 A + that the "Willysboy" is not go- Pte. Naillie Suffers From Rheuma. + ing to be popular when there + * + * + + + + + + {OF THE AWFUL BRUTALITY OF : + + + + tism--Served With Cameron High. ' 5 are, men in khaki. The letter $ -> * * + + * * * + +» + > + * ° + THE GERMANS, PEPE PPE landers. + says: That her baby was cut into pieces * "No girl has taken the trou- before her own eyes by German sol-| # ble yet to say what she thinks {| diers, is the awful story that a Bel-|® Now we are proud of our boy gian woman told to Pte. J. Naillie a! ®* friends in the ranks, the trou- have made a resolution that we || metitber of the 16th Battalion, First) ble is we have very few. We Canadian Contingent, who has been ff|| sent home as a result of his suffering | * are going to have nothing what- Pte. Naillie is at! ever to do with our willy-boys Joyee- | * are are going to refuse to meet 1 {* any boys who are not soldiers, for we have felt mean meeting with rom rheumatism ville. He came over from England it was while on board ship he met|* gach ther safety first ys » . FEPPPEPPPPPESPEP PPPS PPSP FIELD CROPS OF 1915. make her home, when she told him her story. The woman said that German sol- diers took possession of her home, | 1 ; 2 iv. 1 wleduuemn ay Pay 3 iven rom hel The Areas and Fields In Ontario Are they were about to leave, they order- Givens ed the woman to leave too but she The following statements give the stated that she could not leave, aS areas and yields of the principal field she had her baby to care for. The crops of Ontario for 1915. The ar- brutal soldiers then took the baby | eas have been compiled from indivi- and killed the l'ttle one in front of | dua! returns of farmers and the the eyes of the mother, cutting up! yields by a special staff in each town- || the child as one would a carcase of | ship in addition to our regular crop | beef. [other case of extreme Brutality on Plum Puddings | | i : i Suggestion: Include f Plum Pudding in your i || OVERSEAS - XMAS || || CONTRIBUTION. i Our Puddings are the [f| choieest, put up in seal- fi! ed tins, encased in card- | board, all ready for the | address. Cost of puddings, 25¢ § i i {| Prof. M. B. Baker, Kingston. ~ prvivvTveweevveveeveevee, Special Sale Parametta Raincoats ....379 Saturday ! | $10 Coats for $12 Coats for ...$9.60 $15 Coats for ..$11.85 These are all the best English Coats and guar- anteced perfectly satis-' factory. Sale on Saturday only. $6.00 Coats for . . . .$4.50 Nearly all colors, large shawl collars, lock- stitch; will be worth $10 next season. Yours on Saturday for ....$4.50 Heavy Nova Scotia Underwear; all pure wool: all sizes. $1 per garment, EP. js Fe othi Compas - || The Kingston Soldiers .For Drinking In Bars. || Seymour Township. . | frew; Business stimulate public interest in this im- [| W. F. Timms Enlists For Oversens. | success and a safe correspondents: Fall Wheat--811,158 acres yield- ed 24,737,011 bushels, or 30.5 per acre, as compared with 14,333,548 and 20.9 in 1914. The annual av- erage per acre for 34 years was 21.3. Spring Wheat---162,142 acres yielded 3,439,949 bushels, or 21.2 The woman also told about an- the part of the Germans, when they bayo ated @ boy, and carried him around on thespoint of a bayonet. Pte. Natilie was a member of the 43rd Battalion, at Winnipeg, and {| served with the Cameron Highland-{ per acre as compared with 2,169,425 { ers. and 18.3 in 1914. Average 16.1. Barley--552,318 acres yielded 19,- 883,129 bushels, or 36.0 per acre as Compared with 18,096,754 and 31,2 in 1914. Average, 28.1. Oats--2,871,7556 acres yielded 120,217,952 bushels, or 41.9 per ac- re as comparéd with 103,564,322 and 37.3 in 1914. Average, 35.9, Rye--173,736 acres yielded 3,210,- 512 bushels, or-18.5 per acre as com- pared with 2,315,632 and 16.7 in 1914. Average, 16.5. Buckwheat--193,497 acres yield- ed 4,278,366 bushels, or 22.1 per ac- re as compared with 4,251,421 and 24.0 in 1914. Average 20.7. Peas---126,943 acres yielded 2.- 043,049 bushels, or 16.1 per acre as LESS TIME GIVEN The Toronto News says: Soldiers in the Third Military Division, with headquarters at Kingston, are given just one hour less per day in hotels than those in the first and second di- visions, according to a military or- der received by the Ontario License Board from Colonel T. D. R. Hem ming, the Divisional Office Command- ing. Instead of having from 5 o'clock to 8 o'clock, as is the case here, their hours of freedom to im- bibe begin at 6 o'clock. Queen's Stationary Hospital Fund. Already acknowledged, $16,741.46 $300--Picton Cheese Board. $100--Rawdon Township Council; compared with 2,609,585 and 14.7 in 1914. Average 19,1. Beans---62,863 acres yielded 882,- 819 bushels, or 14.0 per acre as com- pared with 835,895 and 16.3 in 1914 Average, 17.0. Mixed Grains---475,738 acres yieldéd 19,461,609 bushels, or 40.9 per acre as compared with 16,854, 550 and 36.9 in 1914. Average 35.3. Potatoes--173,934, acres yielded 13,267,023 bushels, or 76. per acre as compared with 26,717,587 and 159 in 1914. Average 116. Mangels--50,799 acres yielded 25, 302,323 bushels, or 498 per acre as compared with 25,439,520 and 502 in 1914. Average, 459. Carrots--2,439 acres yielded 686 .- 232 bushels, or 281 per acre as com- pared with 767,070 and 313 in 1914. Average, 342. Bugar Beets--22,890 acres yielded 8,556,281 bushels, or 374 per acre as compared with 7,466,819 and 403 in 1914, Average 388. Turnips--97,451 acres yielded 46,- 598,851 bushels, or 478 per acre as compared with 46,336,708 .nd 486 in 1974. Average 433. Corn For Husking--309,773 acres yielded 21,760,496 bushels, (in the ear), or 70.2 per acre, as compared with 23,232,360 and 80 in 1914. Av- erage 71.8. Corn For Silo---443,736 - acres yielded 4,874,377 tons (green) or 10.98 per acre as compared with 4.- 7511 and 11.36 in 1914, Average 27. Hay and Clover (including aflal- fa); 3,231,752, acres yielded 4,253, 763 tons or 1.32 per acre as compar- ed with 3,842,544 and 1.13 in 1914. Average 1.43. $50---Miss Janet Carswell, Ren- Girls' Club, Peter- boro; Mrs. Donald M. Waters, Belle- ville. $30--Capt. John Donnelly, King- | ston. $25--Proceeds of concert at Oya- {ma, B.C.; Miss Ethel L. Lstrom, {| Haileybury; Norwood Presbyterian Guild; Col. McKay, Oyama, B.C; $15--M. R. Reid, Sharbot Lake. $10--Mrs. Lindsay Malcolm, King- | ston; Dr. Thomas Little, Kingston; Miss Mabel Wright, Toronto; S. S. { Scovil, Ottawa; Madoc Women's In- | stitute; Miss Hosie Elder, Swift Cur- | rent, Sask. | $5--Mrs. Edith L. Docker, Hew- lard, Sask.; Miss Sarah A. Brown, | Greenwich, Conn. ; Dr. Sidney Thomp- | son. Long Island, N.Y.; Mrs. J. F. | Macdonald, Kingston; Mrs. John Mc | Lean, Strathlorne, C.B.; Miss Cath- { erine McLaren, Perth. $3--J. C. Spence, Ottawa. $1--Miss R. Donnelly, Ohio. | More Interest In Memorials, Continued reference to niediaeval. | Stained Glass destroyed on the Bu- | ropean battlefields, has served to Toledo, } | pressive and beautiful { honouring the names and deeds of ! the departed. | An interesting booklet "On the | Making of Stained Glass Memorial | Windows," may be had for the ask- | ing from Canada's foremost workers in the art, Messrs. Robert McCaus- land, Limited, 141-143 Spadina Ave- nue, Toronto.-- (Copyright 1915.) WAR BULLETINS, French warships have cap- tured two Austrian submarines off the African coast. The takirg of Babuna Pass cost the Bulgarians 5,000 men. The Bulgarians have captur- ed Monastir. The Alles Way send an ulti- matum to Greece demanding the demobilization of its army at Another of Kingston's yo has donned the many patrons and friends will wish him return. OPP PEP SHO PIP SHEP 44 BP EPE PEO P Es Phy be is asserted tht Plattsbule. Th is spreading rapidly, and as THE DAILY BRITISH wae, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1915. EL OIAR MRL aEOE RARE -- hr rye (BELGIAN WOMAN'S BABY [THRILLING PRoDucTION OF "THE BIRTH OF A NATION" AT THE GRAND. Big Audience Present Last Night -- Spectacular' Drama Showing Civil War Events and Reconstruction Period in Southern States, { "Thé Birth of a Nation," a spec- as Dixon's story "The Was witnessed at.the Grand last night by an audience that filled the house, and productions to-day and to-morrow promise to have equally as large attendances. "The Birth of a Nation" vividly portrays events ledding up to the Civil War in the United States, the bloody conflict it- self, and the scenes of lawlessness that followed during the reconstruc- tion period in the South. nt is brightened by flashes of human in- terest and spiced with touches of ro- mance. Those who lived in the South during those terrible recon- struction years bear testimony to the fact that the scenes presented are ol exaggeration. the Northern' rulers, whe were not. satisfied to merely conquer the South PAGE THREE Probs.: Saturday, light snow falls and a little colder. tacular drama, founded upon Thom-| |i Clansman," | § The inhumanity of but who proceeded to crush and hu- miliate the gallant and chivalrous inhabitants, stands out clearly in this great spectacular drama, which also reveals the fact that the South- erners stood for the right of auton- omy, and not for the perpetration of slavery. The Southerners laid down their arms only when their every resource had been exhausted and after they had parted with even their jewels to raise money to feed and clothe their armies in the field. With no higher motive than the humiliation of the South, the prac- tical disfranchisement of its people, the politicians of the North con- ferred the right to vote upon up- wards of three million ex-slaves, who were in their then condition of ig- norance, as safe to be trusted with it as children are with firebrand: Political adventurers and scalawags were sent avowedly to govern the South, but really to foment troahle between the races and to plunder the whites. The result was a social revolution. The former servitors became, in effect, the masters: The losses of the war were as nothing to what followed. In self-defence the Southerners or- ganized the Ku Klux Klan, and the result was another civil war more ghastly while it lasted than had been the main conflict. Finally the North listened to reason, and a new nation wd® born. Had Lincoln lived, all would have been different, but the fates decreed otherwise, and the mischief was done, the effect of which exists to the present day. 'The photographic production is the highest possible attainment in the silent drama. It took D. W. Griffith eight months to make the production, and he employed a small army of men and women to get the desirad re- su'ts. The battle scenes are simply wonderful. The Ku Klux Klan gath- ering and its at a the negro Maman were to bring forth applause from 1 over the house. There are 5,000 scenes, 18,000 characters, and 3,009 horses. The approximate cost of the produe- tion was half a million dollars, To appreciate to any degree what "The Birth of a Nation" is, one must go and see it. There were many th last night who had seen the produc- tion in New York or Toronto, and were led to view it again. The music is an entertainment in itself. An orchestra of thirty skilled musicians play delightfully, and make the pro- duction ten times more real than if it was an ordinary picture play. - This great picture drama is pre- soated by the Basil Corporation, of which Basil 8. Courtney is general manager. Mr, Courtney is the son of 'Rev. Dr. Courtney, New York; for- merly Bishop of Nova Scotia. His brother, F. Harold Courtney, gradu- ated at the Royal Military College in 1897, and is at the front. Manager Courtney controls the greatest mo- ney-making film in America to-day. He has two road companies. The one which appears here wiil next month return to Toronto for anoth- er three weeks' engagement. The other is in the far west. SECRET REVEALED plexion. Did it ever occur to you that there ig a reason for your sallow complex- ion, pimples, blackheads and other skin blemishes? Your skin, when healthy, has to excrete 17 per cent. of the waste matted of the body! if the pores become clogged, this pois- onous waste is imprisoned and skin troubles follow. To rid yourself of these blemishes the skin must be cured of its slug- shness., S is just what Zam- uk does. -Buk is composed of stimulating Hn lenlitig a Sn f te the skin enable it to expel the accumulated poisonous waste hatter A clear, Healthy complexion is your reward. The a oar to cover shin Aisdzareluenty with powders othér cosme : ent. Use Zam-Buk: Of How to Secure a Good Com. | [i - a A Great Clearance Of Fall And Winter Suits! The values offered for to-morrow makes this suit event the greatest and most sensational ever offered to the people of Kingston. 100 SUITS TO CHOOSE FROM No Reserve! Everything Must Go ! The collection has been divided into four groups, arranged as follows: -- SUITS, formerly $14.50 to $15.50-- SATURDAY SUITS, formerly $17.50 to $22.50-- SATURDAY SUITS, formerly $25.00 to $35.00-- SATURDAY SUITS, formerly $37.50 to $50.00-- Trimmed Millin- ery Two tables of the "newest and smartest Winter Hats, greatly under- priced; reg. $3.50 to $5.00 $2.98 values. Saturday . Regular $5.75 to $7 > $3.98 values. Saturday ... White Flannel- ette Blankets 900 pairs, size 68x74 (double- bed) imported Shaker Blankets -- worth to-day $2.00 a pair--bought before the big advance in price -- as a Tush special for Saturday tit a French Model Corsets Saturday 79c¢ 240 pairs only, Striped Batiste Corsets--all new models -- four gar- ters--the celebrated "Steacy Special," $1.50 quality, in sizes 19 to 30--the best C orset value in Kingston at $1.50. 'The Woman's Store of Kingston." our Special Box Calf, Leather Lined, Vis.ouzed RSA AL RRs Avs ns Hs ava sya PEER ae $6.50 ++... $5.00 to $6.50 HAN TT Ril: » (SAT TRE Tek [R | 3 . am Yercharsing, and the coun-| your collars Before shopping. and ell appointed a small committee | ro 20 per cent. by pov 80." enquire into the matter. apne It is my ows

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