Daily British Whig (1850), 25 Nov 1915, p. 9

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| PAGES 8-12 dhe Daily 1 Pitish mw i | 12 PACES YEAR S2,NO, 274 ~ TEMP ORAL Pe POWER OF THE PAPACY Its Restoration Latest Bait Offered By the Ger- mans---Yon Buelow's Mis- sion. I ---- PRINCE VON RBRURLOW. London, Nov. 25.--The 25 tion of the temporal power restora- | of the Papacy is the latest bait offered by | the Germans to enlist sympathy for their cause. According to a Swiss correspondent of the Standard, Prince von Buelow's recent visit to Switzerland was connected with a scheme for the restoration of Papal sovereignty after the war. This is intended to serve both as a revenge upon Italy for her so-cailed perfidy to her former allies of the Triple Al- liance, and would conciliate the Catholics throughout the world. Al- | though the Kaiser and his advisers | are Lutherans, the German press is | running a campaign, inspired by the | Wilhelmstrasse, to support this pro- | posal. Thus the Allegemeine Rund- schau, of Munich, urges that the Pope's supreme authority and divine mission make it necessary that he should enjoy absolute freedom and sovereign independence. The threat | is made that if Italy should prove | reasonable Germany will abandon the idea of making Rome the capital of a reconstructed Papal state, but | if it refuses, German, . will inflict the supreme humiliation upon her of es- { tablishing the seat of the ope asta sovereign in the capital of "the Ital- ian nation. | CONSIDER YOUR POSITION | Lord Derby having sent the follow- ing letter to every '"'unstarred' man: S. ,~--At my request the Parlia- mentary Recruiting Committee, rep- resenting all political parties, work- ing in conjunction with the Joint La- bor Recruiting Committee, are or- ganizing a great recruiting cam- paign to induce men who can be spared to come forward voluntarily for service in the army. If this ef- fort does net sweceed the - country knows that everything possible will have been done to make the volun- «lary system a success, and will have t¥ decide by what method sufficient 'recruits ean be obtained to maintain our armies in the field at their re- quired strength. Mr. asqaith pledged this country to support our Allies to the fullest exient in ou. power. It was a 'pledge given on behalf of the nation, and endorsed by all parties. Every man of military age and fitness must equally bear his share in redeeming it. May I, as Director-General of Re- cruiting, beg you to consider your own position? Ask yourself whether, in a country fighting as ours is, for its. very existence, you are doing all you can for its safety, and whether the reason you have hitherto held valid as one for not enlisting holds good at the present crisis. Lord Kitchener wants every man he gan get. Will you not be one of these who respond to your country's call? ~1 am yours faithfully, --DERBY. Director General of Recruiting. Ernest @reen, a Baden recruit,who was presented with $80 when he en- listed, was sent to the réformatory for two yea less a day, for bru- tally attacki an aged man. The number of jitneys on Yonge street, Toronto, is reported to have dropped from over seven hundred to eleven, SECRET SKIN DISEASES. Could Be Easily Cured in Their Ear. ly Stages. A famous phy n states that scores of patients come to him suffering from skin diseases of most terrible form, which would have ne- ver passed the early stages had some suitable ointment been applied. Zam- Buk, which is a most powerful disin- fectant and germicide, applied to skin diseases at their first outbreak would save hours of pain and pre- vent disfigurement and scarring. Every city contains hundreds of people. who have some secret skin disease----some eruption, some blem- ish, some open sore, ulcer, or vari- cose patch. There is naturally a dis- inclination to reveal such blemishes, and often they are neglected entirely or some inferior and cheap ointment containing mineral coloring matter is applied, which but aggravates the sore places, and - makes matters worse, From day to day, week to week, this continues, the sufferer 'n the meantime enduring great pain. Now all this can be avoided by timely use of Zam-Buk. Why other- wise has Zam-Buk come to be the world's most widely used balm? For that secret sore, those ulcers, that eczema patch, that open wound -- there is nothing in the whole world of medicine better adapted than the herbal essences and juices that go to make up Zam-Buk. Not only is Zam- Buk a great healer, but it is a cer tain germ-killer, and prevents infec- tion, suppuration and inflammation. If you have some skin disease, which has hitherto defiled every thing you have tried. dou't dally longer--ap- pix Zam-Buk. Zam-Buk is so popular that it is widely imitated, so be sure to see the name Zam-Buk (protected by law) on the box before buying, If you are in doubt, buy from the Zam- Buk Co., Toronto, who will send a box post free upon receipt of fifty cents. The American Federation of La- bor declared it would obtain shorter hours. by ecomonic pressure. -- and the Worst is Yet to Come EE KINGSTON, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 235, 1915 FINALISTS FOR CANADIAN RUGBY CHAMPIONSHIP. Manson in centre with the ball, € Mach Marriott and Man and right. } Lower picture shows Toronto R. and A.A. runner pionship. ; cl oach Lav at either end of the line. The score was 13-7 for liger ereveiroropbramr nro ¢ Frank Shaughnessy as manager of s+ the Canadian Baseball League club for next season, in which event they believe théy could also attach him to the Tigers as coach. The football ttt ttedettebmtntttttttne-d | aDpetite Of 'the Ambitious City will The American football season not be satisfied until they win an- comes to a close this week with the other Dominion championship at Cornell-Pennsylvania and Army- the expense of Intercollegiate final- Navy games, ists The only difficulty in placing an New Ottawa team in the O. H. A. would closely be securing rink gecommadation. At the the arena the oply night available self for matches is Friday. York fams who have heen following 'the activities of third league in establishing it-| in Gotham, believe that all| peace negotiations have been called! loft. The third-leaguers are going Toronto Globe: Frank Shaugh- ahead with the plans, and are said nessy says the Hamilton Tigers to have reached that stage where | win all their games by holding on they will go through with their New the~ne. As "Shag' wins his with il- | York plans. legal interfering it is about time some called the turn on both aggre-| gations. Toronto Star: One change in rug-| iby rules some people think the C.R. U, should consider is the matter of | Harvard University tecently man- kicking off the ball at half-way at | ned 28 eight-oared shell crews with the commencement of each half. | rowing candidates, while * fifty or Their argument is that in nine cases | more oarsmen in single and double out of ten it results . in e . com- Shells nlso practised on the Charles mencement of real play. in the ter- River. a |ritory of the side which did not have the kick-off, Why they. should get | Varsity: The possibility of OH.A. this advantage is something some | hockey hinges on two matters: fin- fans cannot see. They think that! ances and the approbation of theithe captains should toss for choice! athletic directorate. The way things of ends, and that the losers should have developed in the last few days be given the ball to scrimmage at ~--possibility has melted inte pro- midfield. After half-time the oth- bability. er side would be given possession to - ._|serimmage at mid" sla. Some fans The O. R. F. U, overdid itself this] ayep £0 80 far as to say that the ball year and fur the first time in many should be scrimmaged at midfield by years not a protest was registered inthe side scored against after each the union. As the latter had 48 jun-itpy for teams, 14 intermediates and two| seniors this is certainly good work. "WHO DIES IF A new Ladies' Hockey League has ENGLAND LIVE " | ---- been formed ie. Montreal with six | clubs playing. The Crescent Ladies, | : Brave Canadidn Officer "Refusing. to | { the Stanley Ladies and the Tele- graph Ladies and three other clubs | will form the league. The games willl Leave His Men, Although Wound- be played on Monday evenings at the| ed, leads to Victory and Is Jubilee Rip > Killed On Field of Action. | al W s signed Bert, A few days ago the Brockville] Bacsiresl W eR Teg coast al Times noted the death of a popular year ago. Lindsay is a pretty fair, Montreal commercial traveller who goaler, but the fact that he was hand-| had many friends in Brockville, ed his outright release by the Pat-| Lieut. W. D, Deas, who was killed in ricks and not tendered a contract] action. The. particulars of Lieut. this year in the Coast League does | Deas death show the true British not appear to be much of a victory | SPirit, the spirit that has made Brit- for the eastern body. {ain what she is. 4 . Lieut. Deas was wounded in , the g will y | ture of Loos, on the 26th Sept., Tigers will not have much to turn] tap + over tothe patriotic funds. They | 1315. but is Site of his wound-con- haven't had a big gate all year, even| tinued 1 dead S.men and was in- in the Canadian final. Frank Shaugh-| Stantly killed later in the day. nessy's Ottawas were the best draw. His farewell to his captain on go- ing card of the year, and that gate] ing into action was: was only a trifle over $700. They dies will make a little money but not what expected. lives." Lieut. Deas' farewell should thrill | every young Canadian and move him -- | to like heroic action. What mat- Between the halves of the Hay-| ters individual sacrifice, national vard and Yale football game at sacrifice, any sacrifice, what matters Top picture shows Hamilton Tigers, winners of the Captain De Gruchy with ball, Coach Livingstone and Manager championship, Captain ager Harvey at extre me left sup for the Canadian cham- Humphrey s. CITY OF CALGARY LOAN COMES HIGH Toledo And New York Bankers to Get Over Nine Per Cent. ) Winnipeg, Nov. 24.--The City ° of Calgary has made a loan with Toledo Nm ny and New York bankers of $2,800,000 that the truck or trade in war muni- | Rogers can say is that he on 6 per cent. treasury notes at 97, The loan matures $600,000 next June, $700,000 in 1917, and $700,- 000 in June, 1918, As the bankers stand all expenses of printing the notes, war taxes, etc., the interest | rate will be cut down from that in- Which,.as prices used to go, is a mi- dicated. Proceeds will go te retire treasury bills maturing in December in London. -------------- PITH OF NEWS, Despatches From Near And Distant Places. A vote on local option is to be held Brantford next January, Ald. Meredith was found guilty of offering to barter his vote in the To- ronto Council. A Canadian soldiér named Irwin is accused of aiding an enemy alien ef- escape from Canada. The body of the#ate lev. A. H. Visser, Iroquois, will be interred at Brockville on Friday. ' The Hydro employees' strike is off in at Toronto, a tompromise being ef- | fected on the wages question. The defunct Northern Irom and Steel plant, | Collingwood, will be operated at once to manufacture steel billets. The explosion at Nobel, near Par- ry Sound, is: now believed to have been accidental, and the excitement has all calmed down. ' An influential organization com- prising all shades of politics was formed in Palmerston to aid in the campaign for a dry Ontario. Colonel Logie announces that he needs fourteen more battalions from the Toronto divisional area, and ap- peals for more men from the rural districts. and Bulgarian consulates, to obtain the release of four physicians who remained at Uskub after the Bulga- rian occupation. In the British Commons Premier Asquith deprecated the suggestion that if conscription were forced upon Irelagd it would be resisted by drill- ed and armed forces. Significant of the wide variation in the church union vote is the fact that while Knox Church, Stratford, & week ago gave a majority of '85 in fayor, her sister church. "St. . An- drew's, has returned an adverse Cambridge on Saturday $11,420,39 all else if only England lives; "Eng- vote of 27. .| Mer's Naval Service Act was being Dr. Edward Stuart, Boston, is en- | -- EE ---- ( - SECOND SECTION SOME OTTAWA GLIMPSES Special Correspondence by H. F. Gadsby, | 1 'Trade Fears Now Forgotten Ottawa, Nov. 25.-- The irony of fate has ironed out pretty smooth most of the objections raised hy the Borden Government to the trade policy advocated by the Liber- als, in 1911. In fact for a timid Tflock of let-well-enough-aloners the Borden Government has indulged rather freely in that truck or trade with the Yankees, which was the ob- ject of their reproaches only four freer p . | years ago' .Of course they can urge| that it was the Mother 'and- nothi more, It took & war to jolt things loose, {but once a start was made events moved quickly enough. For stance, Major General Sir Sam Hu- ghes, at the request of the Borden | rovernment, organized a Purchas ing Committee in New York which trucked and traded kees to the extent of hundreds of millions of dollars for guns, cartrid- (ges, rifles, shells and things like that, This wholesale tryck and trade with the Yankees on behalf of the British Empire was not wonly countenanced but actually encourag- ed and materially assisted by the Canadian Minister of Militia who took the deepest interest in the tran- sactions of the committee until it, was dehorned by (special commissioner, Mr. D. A. Tho- mas. Mr. Thomas' chief discovery was | tions whether it was carried on with which works 9.66 Ny the Yankees or with our own Cana- | growers and you { C orks out at 9.66 per cent. too | some of great an element of private profit | jump on him fe dian Manufacturers involved for even John Bull's purse to stand. | he reorganized the whole busi- ness on the basis of ten per cent. met | nimum saving of ninety per cent. This is the brief 'explanation of what | Mr. Thomas did. To go into thé details of exortion and plunder | which he unearthed would be ted long a story, The main point is that Mr. Thomas made a clean up of the trucking and trading, as super- | vised by members of the Borden | Government, and now manufactur- {ers of munitions must be content with 'a modest profit instead of the wealth of Ormus and of Ind, which they were piling up before. Mr. Tho- mas is said to have done his work 80 well that some manufacturers will be ahead nothing more than ! their plants for making shells which they get British Government assis- tance to build and which will be | their own after the war is over. Passing from the army to the {navy we again see the Borden Gov- {ernment trucking and trading with the Yankees to a considerable ex- tent. At all events Mr. Charles M. Schwabb, a rather well-known Yan- kee in these, parts, was invited to | Montreal to make submarines fbr |the British navy and he has been | making them there ever since the war started, although it was a Con- servative slogan in 1910, when Lau- discussed, that such a feat was im- | possible in Canada. However, made- {in-Canada submarines are now an accomplished' fact and nothing more {will probably be said along that line. Incidentally these made-in-<Can- (ada submarines are much better {submarines than those made in the { United States by the Electric Boat | Company, of New York and handled {by the Seattle Construction and Dry | {Dock Company. The Canadian-| {made submarines do -what they are |told, but the Seattle submarines for | which Sir Richard McBride trucked {and traded with the Yankees to the extent of $1,150,000--twe cheques by return mail from Ottawa Sir {Richard's submarihes~ which were {originally priced at about $800,000, but were bought by him in a wmo- ment of patriotic frenzy for $350,- | in-{ {teen and "ade with sib vith a 'WwW to showing how deeply he had repented since 1911, It may be said that all these signs and tokens are a long way from the tradir/ and trucking suggested by the Liberals in 1911, a trucking and trading which would have rested in cheaper food for the people of both countries And it could be said truly, for Borden Govern- ment has done no Wg in the diree- tion of cheaper foo. except a report (hs nkees, pos th Country jon the High Cgst of Living which showed them the way, but that only has a proves. that the Mother Country has! ia lot of common sense--simply that! been shelved and the ment of a Dominion Res mission, whieh will probably' bring In some satisfying conclusions how to feed the people without g., ing them anything to eat. Good hop ers, however, ure prophesying that the Government may do something for free wheat That is to say, the Government, having wheedled the appoint ources Com | Northwest farmer into Erowing the with the Yan-|biggest crop in Canadi an history the plea being that the British Empire needed it, and not having enough ships to move the wheat across the Atlantic, may possibly: let down the tariff barriers and allow the farmer to take advantage of t*~ spread be- tween Winnipeg and Minneapolis prices which would amount -to fif- million dollars on an export crop of one hundred million bush jels, like the Canadian Shell Committee, | It may do ghat, and then again it Lloyd George's!may_ not. The Government's friends in the milling themselves first, thing may be done business will After that The best help some- Bob, has the for the grain should see how Conservative papers Or saying that much. that it sounds like warmest sympathy the They point out {a policy and that Bob has no right to suggest policies without first con- sulting his colleagues, H. F Q SPLENDID DISCIPLINE Displayed By Australians When Transport Was Torpedoed. London, Nov. 25.--Details of™he perfect discipline maintained by the Australian troops when the transport Southland was torpedoed some time ago, are forwarded by Captain OC. RB. W. Bean, official press representa- tive with the Australians at the Dar- danelles. The transport was carry- ing the men to Lemnos. The tor. pedo tore a hole forty feet by twelve in the port side. The men turned out immediately, ran straight to their proper places and lined up. There were officers shouting: "Steady, boys! That's the one one thing. steady!" The Southland listed heaviiy to port, but afterwards her list changed with a lureh to star- board, but the men stood there, the discipline perfect. | In the forward part of the ship they could see the hatch broken in and the water wash- ing about the dark Space of the hold, with the bodies of some of their com- rades, who were, killed by the explo- sion, floating about in it. "It is bad luck that two and one-half months in the desert' should end in this," said one. By 12 o'clock the last boat had left the ship It contained the Gen eral and his staff, **ho were itravel- ling by this ship. During the long wait the men amused themselves by singing songs. There remained on the Southland the captain, officers, some members of the crew, and a number of Australian officers and men, who volunteered to stoke the ship and bring her to port. The vessel eventually reached Mu: dros. One of the officers who saw the incident states that General Lin- ton was seen in the water swimming, "Well," some one shouted to him, "how are you getting on, sir?" He answered, "I am doing well. Save the othérs first." = Rescuers, accord- ingly, continued picking up the oth- ers, leaving General Linton, who was was collected for the war sufferers. and" being understood in the broad-| --p-- ---- One contributor pinned a note on a! five-dollar bill on which was writ-! ten: "For the Allies; may the Lord! smite ye if the Germans get this." | est sense as emblematic of the lib-| erty and progress and enlightenment | of the human race. i On the other hand, "Why live if! England dies?" Soaing the Contractors. onacle Man, in. Canadian Toronto. 3 If the Government needs money to Courier, "Glad" Murphy is one of the) EE RET most popular athletics in Toronto,| Mishap to Hymn Writer, and the testimonial rugby game on| Cape Maine, Nov.25.--Edgar Page Saturday between Tigers and Argos Stites, author of . 'Beulah Land." should draw a record crowd to Var-| "Simply Trusting, Just Abgud.) sity. Apart from the good cause,|and man amous hymns, the game itself should be a corker, | & blood pa rar his Hight aye, He bably 'the best hibiti f the is nearly eigh old. ¥ a pol ye es SThibhion o Ne few days 4g0. he gave to. the world : ----- : | his latest hymn, "Crossing the Bar." At' Boston "Ted" Lewis, the Eng-! ir oT lish boxer, knocked out "Jim™ Dut! , It is expected that by spring a full fy. Lockport, N.Y. in less than one| Canadian Army Corps--four divi- minute. The New York State boxer, Slans--will he at ie Tron. the was floored eight times before Re-|'NiTd DEE NOK offered to Brltain. feree Towers waved him tom the iagara Falls | 2h ring, declaring Lewis the winner. $50,000 temple. On aceddnt of the advanced state of the winter season the, propesed rugby game between the Ottawa Big Four team and former players now in Ottawa, scheduled for Saturday next at Lansdowne Park, will not be pulled off. . of this paper will be learn that there is at least disease that se 0 cure in all its stages, and tren. Catarrh being tiy influenced constitutional conditions 5 ---- requi, constitutional treatment. "Jimmy" Britt. for light- Hairs Catarrh eS 1s taken isternally nd act thr the blood on the' Mucous weight champion, joined an Austra-|Surtaces of the Syntem thopern ar lian regiment several weeks ago; and is now en route to the : les. Letters received by( Britt's New York frieads said eaught the war fever while doing h vaude-| they ville turn in Australia. lars for any eure. Send for list - og AR ve fe that {carry on the war--and there is no {call for that "if"--it should follow | the example of the British Govern- {ment and tax these "war profits" | back into the treasury. Where the | "war profits" are abnormal, the fax | should, in my opinion, be a Hundred | per cent. And 1 would levy an ad- | ditional fine of carrying weight to | Punish these ghouls for trying to coin | gold out of the nation's blood and | sorrow. Any citizen called upon | by the Government to perform some service for the nation in its hour of | need, should take a soldier's view of the summons. The soldier does not | stand out for two prices--he serves jfor a ridiculously low wage. He | simply serves, and expects the Gov- 'ernment to do no more thah keep | himself and family alive 'during his 'term of service. But why should | all the patriotism be left to the man has| Of military age who serves in the ranks? Why should we not look | for equal patriotic sacrifices from the {men who serve by manufacturi : munitions or providing horses' We might fairly look for more; for the latter classes stay safely at home and sleep in their own beds. should farmers deliberately brigade them- selves with the harpies, male and fe- male, who have ever followed a fight- ing army, fattening on the money otherwise, which would 'been spent in efficiency. pve : Stroy! the foundation the disease, giv The t wtre by building . ! ~ (by Canadians wh ip the sition ad assisting' na-/ any of our manufacturers or staid DY who would be keen i 000 more than they were worth, are said to be as fond of the bottom as an oyster is of its bed. Some day they will stay down too long or the wrecking tug won't come along in time, and there will be another mil- lion dollars in Davy Jones' locker. Passing from war, to finance, we have the spectacle of a Finance Min- ister, who left his party four years {ago at the dreadful prospect of trucking and trading with the Yan- Kees, on the most harmonious terms with Wall Street, freely exchanging {gold and credit while the sky re- mains in its place as usual. It has I not fallen on Mr. White's head, jcourse, it was the Mother Country (again that showed Canada the way, Ibut Mr. White seems to have follow-| ed readily enough. All his 1911 fears are forgotten and Finance Minister White is now trucking and trading with the Yankees, taking their good money and giving them jour good bonds, as cheerfully and naturally as it he had been doing it {all his life. In his trucking and trading with { Yankee gold Mr. White is more than | England's agent. He does a good! {stroke of business for Canaua too, as witness his borrowing $40,000, {0a at five per cent., 'which loan {might better have been contributed {encuglivge show their confidence in | their ¥ & country [here bank interest is only three oe cent. However, Mr. White did not see that light, at least mot truck it in at that time. He a strong swimmer, among the last to be picked up. When taken from the water he was alive, but much ex- hausted, and he died shortly after from shock and exposure. Major George Janin, City Engifeer of Montreal for twenty years, and a veteran of the Franco-Prussian war, who raised and commanded a corps of engineers, was drowned when the Anglia was sunk. The Danish Government has pro- hibited the export of cotton and ca- sein. % In the Sick Room ie ease with which OXO hie buss With which OXO OX CUBES are beter than beef-tea -- uniform in food-value -- handy -- ready in a moment. Meat-Jellies, savoury custards many « For this an econ oxo Seal

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