Daily British Whig (1850), 2 Dec 1915, p. 12

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fom SE SOWARDS Keeps Coal and | Coal Keeps SOWARDS. ~ ¥ FA Bulk Oysters PHONE 826. Dominion Fish Co. | IF EXPERIENCE COUNTS We Have It Established 1862, MONTGOMERY DYE WORKS | High Class French Dyers | and 225 Princess Street: J. B. HARRIS, Prop. Phone 1114, | See us about a Contract, Cleaners, Pressers, SEAL BRAND COFFEE C 9 anada's Best I ) pound i Whole -- ground -- pu! p 1 n ed alsc ne Ground for Percolators CHASE & SANBORN, MONTREAI ROYAL SALAD DRESSING {OYA MINT SAUCE ROYAL CHILI SAUCE ROYAL TABLE MUSTARD SELECTED PAPRIKA CLUE HOUSE OLIVE D. COUPER. Phone 76. 341-3 Princess St. Prompt Delivery. O11 BUILDERS !! Have You Tried GYPSUM WALL PLASTER? It Saves Time P. WALSH. Barrack St, Buttermilk any Quantity. Phone 845 Having bought the whole outfit of Eastern Dairy School, I am now prepared to deliver Buttermilk in Buttermilk Price's matically | that is | W A i é ary ome Lesrons 2» =» Prepared Especially For This N by Pictorial Review SERVICEABLE SKIRT OF STYLISH DESIGN VA AW Ie A new skirt madel that will look well in blue gabardine. It has five gores an fuverted pleat at the sides and pointed hip sections No one will deny that the separate skirt is always an important item in the wardrobe, but this year it has add- ed significance because of the unusual number of original models that have heen introduced into the world of dress. Here is a very likeable skirt of blue gabardine, although it looks well in any soft fAni=zhed fabric. It is a five gore desigp the ¥ores having an inverted dieat ut the center and a sep urate pointed hip section Finishing the walst is a wide belt of self or con trasting material In medium sive the skirt requires 3 side Pletorial Review Skirt No. 6503. Sj Inches waist Pric 16 cents & Practical Dress Makin cwspaper yards made yard of of B4-in materia rst t right ip fronts per front perforations on front gore with « or evenly matched The large O forations indicate the Now, stitch free above single large "O for a placket Fe erted side gore, creasing on lines of slot per forations, bring folded edges on line of double "00" perforations and press, Turn under edges of hip section on slot perforations; arrange on side gore, mmtching single large "OO" and double small "oo" perforations and stitch 3% inch from folded edges; also stitch the side edges to position. Turn uhder edges of front and back gores on slut perforations, lap on the hip section and on the side gore to line of small "0" perforations, notches even; stitch 13 inch from folded edges as illustrated on reverse alde of envelope and press Adjust 2 inch belting to position un- derneath upper edge of skirt for a stay; stitch upper edges together Now, coming to the belt, turn under left front edge on slot perforations. Center-front indicated by single small CHNSTRUCTION GUIDE 6803 POINTED jt CTION enter to posifion, leaving edges perforation rm ny pleat in together OTF BERT rv = Api %0. 1900 "0" perforations and center-back by Adjust to upper edge tions over doubie "00" perf position, center of belt of skirt The belt and poled hip section may trimmed with or piped with velvet 24 he brat? ze8 38 and 38 Above Patterns can be obtained from NEWMAN Princess Street. & SHAW, THE DAILY BRITISH vos THE WOLF IS A COWARD VARIETY ARE FED ANIMALS Bl BAY ONTARIO HI AG cis About he Beast for Extermination the Govern Fhousand Ap Eighteen Deer North went Spends Dollars a Year First in the Country 1897 peared he Ye ar go that tached to his increase pneard a man on the Goulais we Government would gb ahead and de the wolf would auto remove himself, becaus wolves were un Of till the deer came known in Algoma courss men ais are fond of argument didn't Government for wolf tokens I'he on the Gou And this one recognize t fact thatsthe collected about twice the money deer licenses paid for savs J Curran Toronto Star Weekly In 1892 Ernest Seton told me there were no red dee: of Lake Nipissing He was 1 1897 the first track of a New Ontario was reported eastern shore of Lake swarms with them I'he wr followed them into that territor though these timid skulkers are 80 numerous there farthe the Mississagua Forest Reserve the friendly Llack bear is quent ag you might say [ train running into the Magpie stopped, 80 the crew and pa could get out fat men in Thompson north ght. In deer n Now the red Superior ves have too not as eu And nfre ast fall a mine ser and ehase a Now it may be as well to say at the | outset that the great wilderness noi of the Soo Mic be a great game there isn't a sou money I'here are no hotels houses, and only a wayside tions. There are and lum roads, a few hunters scattering lumber camp, in u abandoned Aud still it moose district o Sault Maris district 2,600 of the 12 deer sued in the whole Province tario last year And the of Maine last year issued less than this one district In a deserted lumber camp on banks of the Goulais River--wh runs into Lake Superior I first heard that shrinking the grey timber wolf, the biggest coward that walks. He is afraid of the tall of leaf, or his own shadow, and man fears with a fear gives sleepless nights skulking grant ic so possessed of palsied that he could never be induced 1 believe to tackle a cow unless ac ly driven to it by staevation By association he has learned the fencelessness of the deer and toothsomeness of the partridge He got his reputation for being dangerous party through the papers As ap advertising agent he is a pronounced success Every little while we read about the or at Batchewana or a camp back of Blind River having a it. It's all press agent work heated imagination I'he grey is an ignorant potterer who does casionally walk into view He it because he does not know anyone is looking at him He doesn't know enough to duck unless he sees some one even when his intuition tell him to Pete l.ajoie shot two wolves on the shore of an unnamed Algoma lake two years ago Pete was sitting back from the shore about 150 yards. The two wolves walked to the beach and probably intended to do a little fish ing But while they lingered on the shore Pete nailed one with his 28.55 The ott er wolf was sitting on his haunches at the time and looked at his fallen companion in a wondering kind of a way He didn't sense dan ger, and Pete put a bullet through his head before he could get anything else through it. The skulker's much advertised intuition wasn't in evi dence "Seemed to me he looked kind stupid," said Pete Down the Goulais from us, say 50 miles from the Soo, a lumber fore man killed a couple with a revolver, and another two got away. The only reason the first two didn't was cause they got stage fright on seeing the man One of the great industries of On- tario--1 mean the northern portion --is killing wolves, I have been told by a Toronto man If you don't be- lieve it, says he, look up the wolf bounty figures paid every year by the Ontario Government. The dudes on the Indian reserves keep themselves in store clothes with their wolf money Peter Yamagisik, Joe Patasag, and the others all look forward to the day when the wolf bounty will be raised, as ardeut hunters advocate I never yet met a man in the woods who wasn't willing to argue that the wolf bounty aould be doubled. They never debate the deer license or the moose rules. But they must have a say on the wolf bounty to bhipicoten can neve country ther beca to take vo no rc few tote cabins is the greatest deer and America L ue Ste 8s about license of 00 On State many entire very the h h sou he Him va fea Laat This newsg mail carr courier run for super wolf { does sho of be A Rerruiting Parade. A novel method of securing re- cruits was inaugurated by the 77th Battalion and the Soldiers' Wives League of Ottawa recently, when the wives and children and female rela- tives of Ottawa soldiers now at the front par.cipated in an automobile parade through the city Every car bore banners with mottoes such as "My daddy is in the trenches- -where is yours and Our fathers, broth- ers and v¥sbands are 'doing their bit' --what about voure®' The 77th is engaged in fillirg up its ranks, de- pleted by recent drafts, 91 Ex-President Roosevelt has accept- ed an invitation to address a recruit- ing meeting in Toronto on Dee. 11th. Dr. Kindred. wardew of the coun- ty of Peterboro, will not again be a candid for municipal honors. eve cial connection WHIG, HEAT YAROR LEADER o 1G. N. Ba OV Dick a and a good or wn words n the 2nd Gor My said SOTTOW Mr. Barnes the whoie Labor Mr Mrs, Barnes ir thei reat bereavement Few en in trade or politics | won such popularity. as the who started life ag a boy | engineer's shop and educated | self studying diligently at classes after his day's work while chatting on one occa with the writer in the smoking oom of the House of Commons that Mr. Barnes told me that, owing to the | #Zact that his father moved from Scot ind to England, he only had two vears' schooling, and that was when he attended a little country school Enfield Highway between the age i eight or nine and eleven *Not much education to fit a man struggle," Mr. Barnes said grimly but the family such that I had to go out to work and after trying my luck ir jute mill I subsequently learned engineer , ing in London, ifterwards serving | out my apprenticeship at Dundee, to | which town my parents returned A | few months after the termination of my apprenticeship I discovered, as it was discovered long before by Dr Johnson, that the best thing about | Scotland is the way out of it; so I | found my way oat of it, and have re mained out of it ever since How the sturdy character and tegrity Mr. Barnes impressed | his fellow-workers in the | trade that he was ultimately ed assistant and then eral secretary, of the powerful Amal Society of Engineers, the the Union hs Pa matter of common in Labor how been Killed with pride sympatgy of went out to and ti wo and hpye Labor in him leader by It was sion at oO for a somewhat purse in of 20 engineering appoint secretary ger gamated blue ribbon of I'rades and how entered lia ment, 18 now a | knowledge people Mr. Barnes that' he attributed being the world the declared the fact of and his om Amalgamat to his ag the early to world House with the | ed Society of Engineers, sociation with Mang in lays of his campaign What Lis in l'om like about Mr Barnes is his independence of char acter, which was strikingly shown in 1908, when he resigned his secretary ship consequence of the North East Coast engineers refusing to cept the settlement he had made w the employers "1 consider he said the time, "that the moment has come when Trades Union officials must make a stand: against the re pudiation of control on the part of their members. It has bean carried such lengths that the employers are beginning to ask why they should trouble to arrange terms with promptly constituents." A canny Mr. Barnes quiet evening with Burns but he most peonle in ac ith at to people who are by their Scot loves a id A of all to fight battles. for dwellers, the unemploved, children, the landless loves the the most slum hungry In a word, George Barnes is of the people london pauper a champion Fit-Bits Prince in the Trenches, of Wales duties at The his hag returned the Front, Prince to military the in one correspondent of A captain 'Ziments writes to to say that it Prince of Wales goes right into the firing line, and, in fact, is rather fond of getting into rather dangerous places. On one occasion he came into my trench at a particul- arly bad place, where there was a gap of 200 yards or more, right be- tween my trench and the one on my left, which it was impossible to hold. The Prince crawled out to a listening post in the no-man's-land, and was badly sniped at by the Germans coming back In the trench next mine on the same day a man was shot through the head, standing next to the Prince of me says Scotch i the front that the from Artillery Horses in Action. In spite of the motor, whods use- fulness in haulage of big guns to the front is undenied and undeniable, there are several sorts of grounds where the functions of the traction engine end and those of the equine gun team begin Generally speak- ing, horses have the honor of gallop- ing their gun on to the field of action and standing the hellish racket of the bursting shells, and the pemtentage of killed among the gun teams is always a very high one The powerful beasts, excited by their surroundings, maddened by the rush, they have just taken part in, sweating and covered with foam, often get out of hard, and, rearing and plunging, threaten to break away from their harness. To contend with a pair of these half-frightened, half- infuriated animals is all one man's work. Ringing for Gofer. A curious custonr is annually cele- brated at the parish church of New- ark, Eng Three centuries ago a wealthy merchant of Newark named Gofer lost himself in the forest that then surrounded the town. He car ried much money and was in great fear of thieves, with whom the forest abourded. Suddenly he heard the Newark bells and was guided home. To commemorate his deliverance Gofer left a handsome legacy to the Newark bell ringers on condition that they should ever after 'ring for Golfer" each Sunday night in Oecto- ber and November. Miss Jane Addams, of the Ford peace party, has been taken to hos- pital for an operation Mrs. Charles Burgess, (ilen Buell, ill for several months, passed away Monday, aged seventy years. really is true { THURSDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1915 1 { | 2 | an night | | condition 69 | Albe life | Was | 1 | last | | | been | | { | | | repudiated | \ | ! alter leave of absence in England A | "Bystander" | boat, the Yong distance is saved by the | { whence the fish is brought | LESS FALY Decrease » Heavy Rains resenting there 100 ac change from t } acres ASE wCres sown to this crop October 1 figure of the standard and A condition is Brit and on are 88 or 89 per cent for and for Man Saskat mt Can Ontario the hewan- 8 and in berta In toba ish Col Ontario ta the condition the two pre less than in either of viou the condition on 90 about ded f« plowed wi was October over Canada per cent For of tt ea inte next rops ported by Oct ber 1 compared with 1 pe and 54 cefit. in 1913 We Lie percentages Manitoba 36 7, against Vear In the are as follows 92; Saskat« berta 4 Root ting of North Canada turnips Cluver and crops in consi potatoe man alfalfa occupied 8,977 9.067 ay 1d ar beet ea of about compared with 1914 and "th ubject t eir revision ared ame cr governing have th vear they yield from {78,600 per ac the potatos vear last were esimated 18 bushels average ield re of bushels Last year cor responding figures 'were 85,672,000 180 bust 119 acre bushels 1,900 acres, and the as average of the !7 bushels for bushels rate per below the so low bushels 14 average of 1910 the five vears Prince Rupert Fish Industry. Mr. John Pullen, President of the Canadian Express Company, who re turned some time ago from a trip to the Pacific Coast, gives some striking figures relating to the growth of the fish industry at Prince Rupert It will indicate," he said to-day "the importance of this business, when I say that the average month]y receipts of nish at Prince Rupert are now. 1,725.0600 pounds--mostly hali- but---and that vessels touched at that port in 30 days At Seattle the average Is 2,000,- laborer, the sweated woman, and the | 050 pounds, with 42 vessels engaged, shows 1,099,000 pounds, with 18 vessels engaged. Most of the fishing is done in the Alaskan waters, nearly 1.000 miles from Prince Rupert; but whereas be- fore advent of the Grand Trunk Pacific and Prince Rupert, the fish was brought all the way from the north to Vancouver and Seattle hy while Vancouver the Prince Rupert, from east, In the pink of condition, on express re- frigerator cars--the long distance be ing saved from the point of catch to Vancouver and Seattle, as heretofore. The business is 80 increasing that we will have to add more refrigerator equipment. In fact, the business has grown so markedly that certain fish- ing interests along the coast have begun to look upon its extension with alarm, and have asked that the Washington Government impose a duty on Canadian fish entering the United States, whose markets now free touching at Little Bulgaria Gone. Toronto's "little Bulgaria" no more, It is a deserted village. The war hag swept it as desolate as one of those villages of Poland we read about A few of the shops are open, do- ing a feeble business by day, and at night glimmering forlornly only to expose more pitifully the dark fronts of the "Caphehas," the restaurants, that but a while age glowed from dark till the coming of day and giv- ing the stretch of East King street, down by Trinity street, the only touch of Europe we had. From one of the most densely populated and teeming areas of the city it has become the emptiest and most forlorn. A year ago, five thou- sand men and about ten women in- habited this one tiny.block. To-day there are a couple of hundred. is Mennonites to Move. In search of a land of milk and honey, ten prosperous Monnonits farmers from the surrounding distriet have joined a large party of explorers of the same faith from Manitoba at the Grand Trunk depot and boarded a train for Prince George, B. C, where they will look over homesteaas in preparation to formfig a large colony. Mennonites from all parts of the East gathered in Southern Manitoba early this week to confer on the ad- visability of seeking new fields in British Columbia. Prince George was picked as a likely spot, and the G. T. able Mennoaite traffic westward, Chalmers Presbyterian Church, I&nsdowne. voted for church union 47 to 34 Knox Chureh, Peterboro, went 151 to 77 in favor of church union. TD (ERED (OD GEE (0D (HED (0D (ERED OD (SE 0) (ED CD GED CD Gan) regards | are | P. now looks forward to a consider- | © D (RIED (1D GRE OD (WD CD (ED (0D (NERD CD (IED (D GED (D (IED (1 < Foot-pri | LA ESPY 4 The Procter & Gamble Distributing Co f Canada td Hamilton, Canada PEED () GEE (D GE CD GED 60D GREED 0D GED () GEE ¢ D GR ( DD (5 (WED (oD BERD (0) (ow) (0) CD (ED G4 ye popularity irs is a long of an entire meritorions Eddy's been the Fibrew dependable Have Foddy sidered Made same we and n= anda time, Dominion good Fddy standard by il banner Three Score and Four v product that can hold the Hi for vears must be Matches matches since 1851 Washbo al Like con the wds they are loy wnadian under NM The Light That Saves { | | | TE OIL GIVES BEST R | For Sale by:--J. B. Bunt & Co., 351-353 King street. Botsf« Hopkinson Mahood Bros. | Bros, 37 115 d & Nicol, 95 Princess street, Brock Princess street, street Simmons Bros, 169-171 Princess street. J ema. # with ining If neglected it +1 t he rur at the HOOT the throat, stomach deafness, huskiness there is bowel troubles You can i Lightning old 'ure a Cough stapcing chr Veng's | nuracles the largest su in the world Coughs and Colds Breachiel Troubles Nasal Catarrh Hoarseness Large vac rontaining 1 Dealers everywhere, or Harold F Proprietors ning lor Price timex ~The Vene hoarseness no end to Every fourth person you mi hina, a and It » of catarrh the danger h Inge Veno's won the Grand Prix and Geld Medal, International Health Exhibition, Paris, 1910. the one night Veno atarrh with of For Nasal To@rte along with twe 1a combination work Thus British remed head ha because it is the sure:t remedy Bifficuit Breathing conts, Whooping Cough Bleed Spitting Asthma BO conde Sold by Drwggists ond ¥, from the Mot awl SE iid Drug (o SULTS The Children's Eyes

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