Daily British Whig (1850), 24 Nov 1915, p. 4

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THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1915. and the go| PAGE FOUR The British 82ND YEAR, ~ | . 4 [to compete The hould be non-politieal in their composition army | England. In Toronto the Good the i limit is twelve hours five days a week and eleven hours on Saturday. Ontario will soon be the tail-ender lin the license-reform procession. | navy and mapagement, and the tendencies of the war may farther than apything else in correct- {ing the errors of {with to their BOYS' OVERCOATS A Strang@Woincidence. ee i i Women Workers In Germany. | - (Brooklyn Eagle.) Germany is long on sugar and her 2,500,000 women field workers, skilled at weeding out sugar beets and hoeing them, must bé& diverted to (Ottawa Journal.) Ever since the Bleucher was sunk, the German sallor-warriors in the Kiel canal have been wondering why they ean't catch the British fleet. the Ggvernment regard mibitary estab- {lishment Te - 78, 80, 82 Princess Street, BILLY SUNDAY CRITICISED. - -------- AAA NP can on Published Daily and Semi-Weekly. THE BRITISH Wma >. me hy J. G. Elliott .e «. President Leman A. Guild . i' Aig Director Treas Telephones: Office | Rooms Business Edjtorial Job Office testers SUBSCRIPTION RATES (Datly Edition) , delivered in cit , if paid in advance 3 r, by mail to rur Year, to United St (Semi-Weekly > t 229 299 ..$6.00 .$5.00 .$2.50 ..$3.00 I. : Church St, Flos UESENTATIV ES 226 Fifth Ave Northrup, Manager. Tribune Bldg Northrup, Manager. | GERMAN INFLUENCE APPARENT, "The State Department at Washing- ton will enquire whether the British Press Bureau had anytauthority for publishing the reports of the Ameri- can embassy officials upon the condi. tions of the prisoners' camps in Ger- many, especially of that at Witten- berg, Prussia. Here the British have suffered for want of clothing and want of care, The point is whether these reports, being accurate, and honestly descrip- tive of existing conditions, should be printed. Do they compromise the writers or the nation which they rep- resent? The Germans have been brutal and unfeeling all through this campaign, They have treated human life with an indifference and callous. ness that have been simply shocking, and they have done this while pro- fessing to exhibit towards the pris- oners so much consideration. Mr. Fox, the pro-German American cor- respondent, was invited to visit the prisoners' camps in Germany in order that he might seg how well these alien wards were fod and housed and Protected, and his reports were wide. iy published as an offset to the wick- ed storieg that other pens had writ- ten and putin circulation, The Am- erican Government ig clearly cower- ing before the threats ft the Ger. mans and before the denunciations also of blatherskites of the John Brisbane 'Walker type. This accounts for the fears which they exhibit in the face of the reports which Lithgow Osborne hag written and with a clearness which every one must ad- mire, © What ie the Wilson Govern- ment afraid of? What is the pres- sure which it feels when the Lusi. tania negotiations with Von Berng. torffl must be kept a secret, and the truth with regara to these prisoners' amps must be suppfessed. t POLITICS AND WAR. It costs, according Weekly, $20,000 to educate a boy at West Point, the highest military school in the United States, It costs $12,000 to educate w Ta® in the naval school in Annapolis, which is the best naval school in the neighboring republic, It costs $2500 to edu- cate a youth at Harvard Unigersity. Why the difference in these figures. The institutions at West Point and Annapolis are political, They cost a heap of money, and the graduates from them are not then given to the States in the order of merit, for ser- vice or appointment, but the Con- gressmen are allowed to make nomi nations and manipulate appoint- ments as political rights. The United States is, therefore, educating many cadets of whose ser- vice the country does not get the ad- . vantage later, Canada does somne- wlhiat better with the graduates from the Royal Military College. It does not cost over $3,000 to educate a Youth and develop him so that physi- cally and technically he is fitted for any position in civil and military life A certain number ofthegraduatesare given appointments in the service of His Majesty's Government in value and importance according to the brilliancy of their annual and final examinations. But the larger num- ber of the graduates are dependent, as in the United States, upon politi- cal pull for their success or advance- ment in the profession of arms.' Canadians who are interested in "the Royal Military College, and its Eran wii appreciate the recom- wendation of Col. Tounsley, of the Annapolis Academy, who 'says that to Collier's ~~ PUBLISHING | >. vere beens' 1548) = of the church militant, recalls that It is a curious: commentary that the Toronto papers, which tained the addresses of Billy Sunday on the temperance question--reéports which embraced some red hot stuff-- there appeared, over the signature of the Ontario Licensed and Allied [ Trades' Association, a-remarkable ar- ticle. It was originally addressed | {to the New York Tinres, and gave the | reasons why the Graduate School of | | Princeton University did not invite Mr Sunday to address the students. 1e students heard him, but fiot un- | der its auspices. 4 in con- {| Mr. Sunday is qaite original in 'his { | language He is vulgar at times. | | His talks with God and tlie Devil, and [ his references to Heaven and Hell are | defined by Prof. West as * swaggering impiety." The closing of the doors of Princeton against Mr. Sunday is | 1®ar something from ouy old friend |He said to have been done in th of "decency and purity i e- tity of the Christian faith." } The men who believe in dignity of | in beauty of diction, lan- of the most polite and cour teous character, must:see that they are out of harmony with Billy Sun- If he accepted them as his mo dels he would be out of business at once. His success lies in the that he is quite original and that he believes people to shocked into religion sobriety and correct living. The Whig has follbwed closely the | several campaigns of Billy Sunday since he left Scranton, Pa., some time ago. It has observed that sometimes he uses figures of sneech that from | any one else would appear to be rank | | blasphemy, and yet men who have | | studied him at close range, have, in | | the religious as well as secular press, | | declared that he 'is.intensely sincere | and doing a good work when he cuffs and mauls and berates his fellows until they are disposed to 'hit the rail." The protest of Prof. West may af- fect Toronto, and it may not. Any city that can stand the revelations of the Vice Commission can stand all that Billy Sunday can say without blushing. Billy Sunday has stirred the people up as no one from the Graduate School of Princeton Univer- sity could have done." Some good will follow his visit. Adpe 4 al pose, in guage day fact some have be and EDITORIAL NOTES, "Ma" Sunday claims a relation- ship with certain Canadians. She told the people of Toronto that she had "many relatives in Kingston." This caused a laugh. Where does the humor come in? : | | The alleged agreement - between China and the Allies is a fiction It is a possibility, however, or a neces- sity, in order to put an end to Ger- man intrigues in China. Japan will see that the conspirators are attend- ed to in due time. Toronto, Hamilton and even pa- nee, gave the returning heroes, the invalided soldiers, tremendous ova- tions, They were made to feel that their countrymen were grateful and| appreciative. What happened tc! prevent all this in Kingston? ! The complaint of the aldermen with regard to the returning sol- diers, and the want of suitable em- ployment for them, suggests that the Government's elaborate plans are not being carried out. = Who is to blame? The question should be followed up. | | | | { Dr. Milligan, Toronto's champion in 1910 he counselled the people to "fight for church union and prepare for the Germans." This was dur- ing his travels abroad. The people do not seem to have acted upon his advice, and they will have occasion to repent of it. Mme. Melba, the distinguished prima donna, will buy no more gowns during the war. She is giv- ing all she earns to the good of the cause, and her gifts thus far amount to $200,000. She has turned her beautiful home in Paris in an hos- pital for the wounded soldiers. She does not. understand how so many people can be gay and careless while friends and relatives, KINGSTON EVENTS 26 YEARS AGO TEST erttmd Twenty men left the ef , to-day, for the United States to look for work. : The City Council voted $1,300 to improve the fire alarm system. Over 4,000 bushels of corn were Wilvaded at Portsmouth this week. @ area of the assessed property in the city is 2,300 acres. ps Er ------------ ot France, conferred again onstantine on Tuesday.and pression Prevails at Atnens vorable agreement was ua -- | should millions are weeping over the loss of Many Thanks To Them. (Hamilton After all grateful to because Herald.) Canada ought Bourassa and they declined 10 be Lavergne the invita- [ tion to enter the Borden cabinet. All In the Looks. London Advertiser.) A fur neckpiece is blamed causing a New York ginl's from anthrax; but this will not sales, for death affect | Think how sweet they look. Happy Thought, (Montreal Mail) Lord Kitcherter 'is said to have! gone to Greece to bring King Con- stantine to time, Why not send! Mrs. Pankhurst along to handle Queen Sofia? Old Nick Busy. (Montreal Star.) It is altogether likely that, we. will} Grand days. Duke Nichola one of these His presence in the Caucasus cause some uneasiness near Baghdad. The Allies Making Good, wronto Mail) will save Serbia cost They have declared they will not sheathe the sword until Belgium | has been compensated for what she has lost The war will have to be fought to a finish if those two pro mises are to be made good. The Ali al any at Contest. (Toronto Globe.) Liquor-selling is confined to five and a half hours a day in London, nr rb a AG other work, These gnarled women, forty of them usually working under one man; were paid 15 cents a day. It is this efficiency in Germany which gives the world cheap sugar. A Physician's Plain Duty. New York Herald There has been much discussion during the past few days, in connee- tion with the life and death of the little Bollinger baby in Chicago, as to physician's rights and duties. in the face of death. It is indeed a marvel what a tempest in the great world of thought of America the little helpless short lived one ereat- ed Now that the incident is about to cease to be the nine days' wonder that it has been, it may be as well to brush aside some of the clouds of doubt that have heen raised by the discussion 40 state:very simply what a physician's duty really is, He has to do with life and not with death. is licensed to practise medicine in order to preserve life and to put off death as long as possible, A physician's diploma does not in- pose on him the duty to decide whe- ther life.in a particular case is worth {living or not so that he may save it or allow it to terminate as he seef fit, nor does it give him the privilege whether the life of any'human being will be a benefit or a burden to so- ciety, Above all he is not sent forth as a social expert to solve all the complex problems of humanity': His duty is very clearly limited to caring for the physical condition of his patients. If he strives to set up a Providence on a small scale there will be insurmountable difficulties and, serious abuses will surely arise, A A doy Sleepytime Tales THE COUNTRY SQUIRREL. Onee upon a time the country squirrel went to visit his city cousin, whom he found. very fat and proud and very, very lazy, for vou see this | eity squirrel was taken care of by the | city people, and didn't have to work | for a living. .He had a beautiful lit- | tle wooden house with a soft bed and every morning a lot of children came to feed the lazy squirrels. They brought the choicest nuts all cracked and all he had to do was to hop down from his house and eat the nuts, The little country squirrel thought this very strange, and at first didn't like to go near the children, but his cousin told him not to be afraid, as even if the children wanted to hurt him, the big policeman would not let thé. So at last the country squir- rel learned to eat out of the chil- dren's hands, and he grew so fat and lazy he didn't want to go home to the country and have to work for a liv- ing again. One morning the >ountry cousin had eaten so many nuts he couldn't eat the last three the children had brought. He tried to think what to do with them, for he was growing selfish, and didn't want 'anyone else to have the nuts even though he could not eat them. He looked around and saw, under a tree, a baby carriage with a little tot in It fast asleep, and he made up his mind that was the very place to hide the nuts. Very carefully, one by one, he carried them and tucked them under the carriage robe, and as he found it so nice and warm there, he cuddled down and went fast asleep. In a little while the nurse started to wheel the carriage towards home, and the Baby and the squirrel still slept on. When they reached home the nurse lifted baby out and car- ried her into the house. When they unwrapped the blanket the squirrel opened its eyes and rolled out on to the floor, where it sat up and looked around, as much as to say: "Here, what are you doing with me?" Next week I will tell you what happened to the little country squirrel. np "Low Cost of Living" Menu | --- Menu for Thursday BREAKFAST Rutland Grapefruit Individual Steaks Baked Potatoes Corn Pone. Jelly Coffee DINNER (Special) Cream of Onion Soup Roast Turkey, Italian Stulling Mashed White Potatoes Glazed Sweet Potatoes Stuffed Celery Olives 3 Bolled Onionyg Hubbard Squash Mashed Turnip Cranberry Frappe . Salted in | Cheese and Salad Plum Pudding Mince Pie Nuts and Raisins Crackers anil Cheese Cofiece SUPPER Brolled Oysters Graham Sandwiches » Mince Pie Pumpkin Pile Cheese Hot Chocolate ~ BREAKFAST Rutland Grapefruit---Cut grape- fruit in halves, remove the pithy centre, chill thoroughly, and just be- fore serving add a tablespoon of maple syfup boiled until thick and then cooled. * DINNER Italian --~Rub the turkey with olive oil and fill with the fol- lowing stuffing: Soak a calf's brain Juice over them. ter broiler and cook over a clear fire, Serve on strips in water for one hour, then chop and add one cup of chopped cooked spinaeli and five uncooked sausages. Mim all together and add two beaten eggs and season with salt, pepper and parsley. Add dry bread crumbs until of the right consistency. Cranberry Frappe--Boil one quart of cranberries in two cups of water eight minutes. Strain through a sieve and add two cups of sugar and boil five minutes longer. Then add the juice of two lemons and boil five minutes longer, Stuffed Celexy-- Beat together a large cream close, a tablespoon of butter, and a teaspoon of chopped chives or green peppers. Fill each celery stalk with this mixture, Plum Pudding Grate raw potato and carrot enough to make one cup of each. Chop a cup of suet very fine and add a cup of. sugar, one cup of flour, one cup each of raisins, cur- rants and citron, one tablespoon of allspice, two teaspoons of cinnamon, one teaspoen of baking soda, and half a teaspoon of salt. Steam four hours. This will make one large pudding. . ~ SUPPER Broiled Oysters-- Select large oys- ters and wipe dry, dip ina little melted butter and sprinkle lemon Arrangé on an oys- of hot toast brown butter sauce. with Rhymes Sipping LITTLE Little horns bunch of 'kale. men." There. the hole, while his soul." +a gent feel frisky as a tall season he feels passing well why he shouldn't yell. the village jail, and the then, "Break some boulders, ~~ THINGS ~ of whiskey, little cups of beer, make roan steer. For a little » and he sees no reason Then the peelers cart him to Judge will part him from his If he has no money says the jurist, Is something worse; ask t pauper hearse. Little and then, ruin minds and For the more you swal- € more to follow, slugs of gin, show the Hi KINGSTON"S ONLY CASH AND ONE PRICE MEN'S AND BOYS' WEAR THATS A STEEP Cums BUT ILL MAwE IT! | Any old kind of Shoes will do £o up. STORE. NAAN tr ta SHOE TALK of) Hal ing down hill, but vou want to One of the most formidable rocks in the roads of success is the boulder of clothes criticism: From the top of your head to the cuticle of your toes you should be dressed in a manner that will win admira- tion and ward off SEE BIBBYS Workingmen's Shoe Special, $3.00 Heavy solid sewn aud pegged, storm tongue; tan black; sizes 6 to 11. soles, ' or BIBBYS Young Men's Suits Very classy garments, hand-tailored by ex- perts: The Bud The Earl The Recruit .... The Grosvenor ..$18.00 The Poole ......$18.00 lishly and comfortably shoed. criticism. For a sure success foundation, keep sty- i ; § . 5. AAA AA iA tan SEE BIBBYS $5.00 Fine Shoes. The celebrated **Just Wright Shoes," the real SEE BIBBYS ~" Fine Shoes, $4.00 Tan or black; new style toes; Blucher, but ton or English Bal. King Bee in Shoedom, { \ A BIBBYS Young Men's Overcoats Real Beauties BIBBYS Headquarters for Men's Underwear Sweater Coats Pyjamas Hosiery Gloves, Etc. Seé Our New Wolthau- sen Hats, Made in Canada, $2.50. The Broadway ...$15.00 "The Kensington .$15.00 The Kitchener ..$18.00 The Guard The Comet REWARD For infagmation that will lead to the discovery or whereabouts of the person or persons suffering from Nervous Debility, Diseases of the Mouth and Throat, Blood Poison, Skin Diseases, Bladder Troubles, Special Ailments, and Chronic or Complicated Complaints who can- not be cured at The Ontario Medi- cal Institute, 263-265 Yonge St., Toronto. Correspondence invited, ~ | What to Do to Get Fat and | Increase Weight. The Real Cause of Thinness Most people eat from four to six pognds of good solid fat-making food every day and still do not Increase in weight one ounce, while on the other hand many of the plump, chunky folks eat very« lightly and keep gaining all the time. It's all bosh to say that this is 'the nature of the individual. It isn't Nature's way at all . Most thin people stay thin because their powers of assimilation are defee- tive. Th absorb just enough of the food they eat to maintain Life and a semblance of health and strength. Stuffing won't help them A dozen meals a day 'won't make them a single "stay there" pound. All fat-producing elements of their food Just stay there in the intestines until pass from the body as waste. a such people need is something that 'will prepare these fatty food elements so that their blood can ab- sorb them and deposit them all about the body something too, that will mul- tiply their red %lood corpuscles and in- crease their blood's carrying power. oT 'such a comkdition it is well to recommend eating a Sargol tablet with every meal. Sargol is not, as Some believe a patented drug, but is simply a careful combination of six of the most effective and powerful as- shnilative and flesh building elements fnown to chemistry" It js absolutely larmlgss, yet has been wonderfully ef- fective and a single tablet eaten with each meal often, according to reports of users, has the effect of increasing Fhe weight of a thin man or woman rom three to five pounds a week. Sar- Toba druggists every- gol is sol by all" where on a positive guarantee of back. i weight increase or money Throw Away Your Eye-Glasses! | The social season.is now in full swing and that means Evening Slippers We are Sowing all the new styles in Satin, Patent, Suede "and Plain Kid Leather at $3.50, $4, and $5 Es ---- SE J.H.Sutherland & Bro, The Home of Good Shoes. rr JOHN M.' PATRICK Sewing Machines, Um- brellas, Suit Cases, Trunks, repaired and refitted, Saws filed, Knives and Scis- sors sharpened,. Razors honed. All makes of Fire- arms repaired promptly. Locks repaired; Keys fitted. All makes of Lawn Mowers and repaired. "149 Sydenham St. a a at a A Free Prescription You Can Have Filled and ding Do you wear glasses ? Are FON a vie: | im of eye-struln or other oye weaknesses? | I so, you will be glad to know that there | is real hope for you. Many Whose eyes say they have had their eyes the Principle of this won- | 0. 3 was i Oue man says, after trylug It: "1 " * could not see to red ut all, Now I ¢an read everytuing without any glasses and my eyes do not water auy more. At night [they would pain dreadfully ; mew they feel foe all the thme. It was like a miracle to! | one Bon - | With this times dali me, A lady who used it suyw : "The | teuphere seemed hazy with or without bul a i lasses, after usiug this prescription | r fifteen days everyihing seems clear. 1 | can even read fine print without glasses. it is 1 thousa w wear glasses can Bow discard them in a Son able time, and multitudes more will be able to strengthen their eyes so us to be red the trouble snd expense of ever! Eye tron of many de- | may be wonderfully benefitted | wing the simple rules. Here is the | y. clear y and it Now in Stock: | | Jew New Currant. | New Crawford Foot of Queen Street. Phone 9. op & card to 19 Pine street when [waning anything done in the ca Hue. Estimates given on all and: naw work; also

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