Daily British Whig (1850), 28 Dec 1915, p. 6

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THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1915. p-- PAGE SIX (Gananoque ee a teacher . Ph College ston, of the Jueen Kenne of Queen's N¢ public s Maple Gre Front of Allee School; Leah " wdie Anglin, Peterb hool; Haze] Wil Kirke, teat On those phos Joht of lent Lake teacher James Bevins Pea Web Leeds and Ottawa idbury eacher a rl ter teacher insdowne il Smi NOT mpson and re SOT her 1 Tel tion of ra aking part ed cant I the gain 1 ning ita, "Sar Young 1 y Church ind gotd Hurd tma Bibl presented a han ta's Chr adles Gira hea mmbri | | | | evening DeWolt. tf | { { | nnock | en WAR WILL BE DECIDED LOV Al OPINION IN FRANCE, IS FRASER'S he More The The | | Away From France The Be "1 ter They Serve Their Own Ptr | Guard Egynt First, | Ya Ma reed Germans Lure lies Fir } 18ain n Power ave these columns naval commanding the ses al key-hole is t Suez Il. Egypt! anal there onr ind 1 « fore for tant th are Allies an eB 'or Constantinople, or Bagh. | have scoffed at the people | have t ed so much and so an ly about our prestige n the | charaq and founda | which they seem to know | nathing whatever 1 hem | that for us, at this our prestige throughout the East ite mo distant islands will stand fall, not by failure or success at Dardanelles, not by adventures in the Halkans, not by a minor thr at] Baghdad or in Syria, but more than | anything else by our abil ty to hold | the Suez Canal | The Suez Canal for us, and far more impor ilkar the Dar | inelles dad I wh of the of ter tions £1 me te] juneture to or the X Is our jugular vein, | We must hold it Or we are undone Fail to hold it ang to make it im- | pregnable against attack and you | will have trouble in India Xu to-mo x Tow, dismay (hroughout 2 Australasia, | ---- | FL YY ANTED = fh | y 3H | KINGSTON ONT { | POSTMASTER | Mr 30. | question | do not | won by battles. Eas tern Ontario Points | DIED IN ERNESTTOWN She Had Her Whol in Fownship 7 Mrs pa away several weeks name was Lovina was a highly respecte resident, who had spent her life in Ernesttown; her age being seventy four years and six months Deceas ed 'wag a member of the Methodist Church, and died as she lived, a true follower of Jesus Christ, in whon she commended herself hours before her death, waiting for the Master to call her home to be at rest. She was a good neighbor and kind friend. Be sides her adopted son, she leaves two brothers to mourn her loss, Mr. L Hartman, of Camden East, and Mr S. D. Hartman, of Ernesttown, Her husband and son predeceased her several years ago The funeral vica conducted at her rasidence 14th her pastor, Rev. Mr Barnes, Odessa I'he remains were taken to Cataraqui vault to await in terment in the spring Lif Spent Absalo on De illness Hart sed th, after Her maiden man She ser was by on Deg AND WIE CELEBRATI Wedding Of Millbrook ple Fittingly Observed Millbrook, Dec. 28 Mr. and William Vance celebrated their wedding anniversary. Of ly only Mr. Arthur Winnipeg unable to For foriy-eight Vance have been re librook« For more than fort Vance has been George and tie and Lottie Fort Erie were Mr ep Golden Cou- Mrs gol the fa Vance be Mr den mn one son of was pres years i M postmast judge of S daughter Misses at home, Mrs. El and Mr Calling preg senior nty four nt On day and Mrs, Vance w ind the ins tige in the 0 shaped decided not route, the different with e sition Jul hav held the Cs L fiXteen no risk perd ave heer inal w W months 1 ran there n Here, then, I guiding ions of venture to suggest principle upon which a regarding the Near turn It does not neces a modification of po Dardanelles, or at Saloni ka, or on the Tigris Or answhere Ihese-are matters on which propose offer any opinion iware of the submarine and all implies 1 is a our d hould Hi mean at the our not I am to well that it down this one consideration, the key to all our other problems Guard Egypt | first, and let all other problems be dependent upon the guarding of Egy pt only lay which 1 believe to he Having dealt with Egypt turn a little common sense even greater problem of the war in the least believe in the theory of attrition, or in trench war fare 43 § means of victory, or in al the"nonsense that is being talked about new conditions of conflict. Wai Is as old as humanity. The principles of war are unchanging. Wars ar That is a great anc simple ith that is being forgotten The two great decisive events i this war so far have been the Batt! of the Marne and the Battle of Nancy. The trench warfare has serv ed its purpose, but it will not be et ernai. We have to prepare for great er battle yet, not at the ends of th. {earth but at our very doors I believe this War will be decide in France. The more the German lure ourselves and the French awa from France, the better they ser. their own purpose. We shall onl crush Prussian militarism on Pru: sian soil. Let us guard our warld routes, continue to press at the en emy's vitals, and leave our presuige to take care of itself. It us on ar 4 and and THE DISTRICT ~ NEWS LIPPED IH WH. A MANY BRIGHT EX( HANGES (a Briet Form the Events In the Country About Kingston Are Told ~--Full of Interést to Many. PECULIAR CAS] For ( Insane iti Man been pen Ignoran wher nagir home Calabogie t r pa such a ndition They pra night ent ir would ling where go him with and t boasts | they ot |.no author | man had take ibsolutely ities to taken | ment from 'T action his condit somewhat alarming ire 1 at the | point ) | townspeoyle tion amd have sometl them years | | One New Rockwood Ho {SAY THEY ARE ON BRITISH BLACKLIST. |U. 8. Mercantile and Manufac- | turing Concerns Assert They Are Suffering Losses. De A. and Many manufac London | can mercantile | firms doing business in Great fain are said to be suffering losses due to a blacklist which they assert the British Government mantains against neutral industries suspected of having affiliations with Great Brit 1in's enemies Official circles admit suspected of actual Central Powers their allies are objects of suspicion and liable to | meet with discFiminatory treatment, | but it is denied that simply because | an American firm may have @erman stockholders it is placed in the same 'ategory as organizations which are Known or suspected to be trading with an enemy country It is indicated that such treatment would be quite impossible of enforce- ment without great injustice, for scarcely any large industrial organi- zation is without stockholders of va- ried nationalities. Some of the American firms which are suffering as the result of the alleged quiet boycott complain that they are the victims of commercial blackmail lev- ied by British rivals. One firm which already has suffered grievously has tried in vain to ascertain from the Goverriment the nature of the accu- sations against it Ameri turing Brit- firms the that trading with or "For Coughs and Colds." Gibson's Red Cross Cough Syrup works like magic. A contribution of $1235 has-been made by the Presbyterian congrega- tion of White Lake to the Writish Red Cross Society. "For Coughs and Colds" take Gib son's Red Cross Cough Syrup W. J. Callaghan, Belleville; aged twenty-one years, died on Sunday He was a blacksm SUPPRESSED PAPERS ice sup official uff: agettes prohib ticles any ewspape pe ited taken reignin {ered paper vilizg t placed on very long Was on uppr ented on tmer He ntenced 1 was fol mpri EiXleen risonment rk wheres son d labor for he of Man 10.000 liens of age interned on the Isle of Man, 'all men, and they are being upported by overnment uit approximate shillings FElabor CAI ps yslems have beginning in establishing work idleness can be turned time all the in brought here Aliens laterned on Isle here are mos 10,000 mn Lary he ( an cost © 0 pe capita ale with modern sewage been constructed lias been mude shops, where into industry In terned aliens may There are almost 4,000 at Alexandra Palace in London still are no longer any interned ot | near Aldershot I'bere are stil Germans and Austrians who have not interned, and all bave a chance ing before a tribunal estab the purpose of deciding internment desirable they can communi Home Governments American Embassy maintains two men at the of Prince Lichnowsky lerrace For many ese two men have been Ed Lowry, of New York, and H. Littlefield, of Providence agitation calling for the wholesale internment of enemy aliens which a part of the London press car ried on most vigorously last year, has now died down, and there appears to be no general riticistn that the Home Office is not handling this dif ficult problem fairly and svccess fully ar ia be 4 There rimley many thousands of been of appear lished for whether When interned cate with their through the wich still rmer home n Carlton months th ward ( Leland [he Is Surnames Which Curious Indicate Trades names. of obsolete trades to be met with in medigval cords Some obsolete names of trades survive in surnames, such as Webster, Lister, Walker. In the four teenth century the weaver was known as the webster the dyer was the "lyster and the workman who trod the cloth in the dye-vat was the walker." The '"arkwryght made the arks or chests in which clothes or"meal were stored, and the smith was frequently dubbed (he faber,'" this latter being one of the rare cases in which the Latin trans lation of a craft has become a com mon surname. When Lhe "'cotteler' had forged an edged tool the "blom er" finished it off, or put the bloom on, the "chapman" traveled with goods from door to door, and coke" baked conls and sold them are re he ( 'hurchill's 8 Stick. One of Mr. Winston Churchill's ETeatest treasures is the gold-mount ed cane that was given him by King Edward as a wedding present. Once Mr. Churchill, when staying in Paris, left the cane t8 a railway train It cost him a lemgiby telegram and a big fee for a special messanger to recover fl. A Gardener Peer. Lord Redesdale, whose memolrs are arousing so much attention in Britafi, is one of the greatest living authorities on horticulture. He is re- sponsible for the present design of the gardens at Buckingham Palace, which work he took up at the special equesi ef King Edward Tea in Burma. Most of the tea raised in Burma fs Plekled and eaten as a condiment. - Henry Pigdon and Mrs. NP Fleming were united in marriage on Dec. 22nd at Belleville W. W. Adams was elected Reeve cf Newburgh. New Year's Cards. Uglow's. WIFE FOR TWENTY SHILLINGY indland Dog Was to Make a Bargain A Newt Thrown in 11ar t farmer bad ompeon brought his w town Carl and by announced he was about to s Al midday Thompson wife on a large oak chair a rope halter of straw about neck. He then made this announcement Gen- tlemen, I have to offer to my wife Mary Anne otherwise Williams, w of gle bellman | her, his th the placed with or he Fhompson hom I mean to and fair bidder well as mine to part ell to the est is ber forever She wish oorn omfort he beer took my hot t she has serpent I the good of tame my curse 1omest dally dev I speak t I say: May ( blesome wiv mer Avolg ad fey I't man was finally Henry Mea: shillings ¢ a Newfoundland Man and wife parted in yp good temper, Mears and the woman going hompson and the dog an log one other way, 1 Fhe "Lord Sahib." [he late Sir George White wonderful in the way of taking exer cise, and when Commander-in-Chief in India used to run his staff off their legs when going for exercise round the various roads in the neighbor hood of Simla. There is a tunnel by which the main road goes throug the hillside at spot, but ft narrow that a policeman is stationed at each end to keep the traffic going alternately one way or the other On the occasion of a large garden party, according to Sir "obert Baden Powell, in his book, "Indian Mem ories (Jenkins), when all the rank and fashion of Simla in their rick shaws were about to pass through the tunnel, the policeman stopped them and held up the traffic, for the news had spread that the Lord Sahib was coming through The "Lord Sahib" is the title given by the natives both to the Viceroy and to the Comman der-in-Chief Everybody waited expectantly see one or the other of these nates riding through with all hie glittering staff, instead of which there came from the tunnel a single, solitary figure--a tall, thin man in a singlet and flannels, running in more senses than one, and not a little star to find himself in the presence of Simla's collected as if to receive him was Sir George was Is & one to mag tled society It G has Spence, an been for on a new kind artillery He now has it sufficiently to place it before the authorities of perfected mili tary It is that Veni- Greece de post i at Salonika hag asked Premier of Office reported of two small German a district Prince Egon Hodenlohe furst, son of the former chancellor, is dead British troops cont ried antine zeles become The War struction n the Ri rep Cons to King the Schilli ng German nue to pour in Salonika FOOD ADULTERATION Department of faland Reve Doing a Big Work The Federal Departme Revenue noe 8 and that duties an spirit and on tobaccc Cttes, man Minion, ) Ing the aduiter ducts tacy ation of and of punishing those guilty of adulteration. Considerable In the work of detectior La Jes are maintained number places where samples of foodstuffs are anzlyzed, and the record of this work fille a large blue book issued lly by the Departmer Some 18 done in the work of de but eomparativele little in rk of following up the punishment of the violators the low Adulteration will not stopped until ad@lterating has made an unprofitable business hy imposition of fines upun the gn persons What measure of sucece tended the work tion can ascertained by a glance over port of the Department recently sued For inst a simple some, versal of the Inland find with In the the Fas Townships ples of ground ginge and six were found 8, forty cent enough In the District of samples were also seven were found adulterate 1, which s worse still In the Distrdet of Kingston fifteen were e xamined, and all except one were pronounced gen tine. In Toronto all were found gen uine, and Victoria had good a re cord I'he should our food pro- tee the hy of he detection been the Ity st has at he Ie 18 of detec the ance, take ground article of agreeable, and in What did Revenue respect this Inland stern ginger, ng, whole almost uni the ingpectors Department rti Bea s( 18e to le? District of fifteen sam- were analyzed, adulterated--that whieh bad Revenue per Montreal fifteen examined, and law now be honey that honey the product of the work of operating upon the nectar of flowers, but honey is adulterated by feeding the bees cane sugar, and the inspectors found many samples of extracted strained honey nof up to the mark Against some sample examined the inspectors wrote Agh high "Excess cane sugar is not Manufacturers claim Honey-moon syrup,' Haney moon syrup" is moonshine to deceive the public Another bogus article was {nvoiced as "Balaklava The bees did not make it Some of the coffee substitutes were curious One consisted of one hun- dred per cent, of roasted oats, in cluding chaff. It was sold as a coffee substitute, The sweeping of the barn floor after threshing would make this mixture Most of the substitutes contained, course, chicory, also roasted peas, and other roasted grains, They were called substitutes, and for those who like that sort of a beverage, these substitutes would make the very beverags they like On the whol) tos vaporated ap- ples were found iu be satisfactory, but some samples contained much water. Olive ci! gtood the test well, but some of tlie lime juice was below the standard equires that is, bees 0 honey' honey gold as is not honey of too To Run Lights All Winter, Beginning with the 'winter of 1916-17, the Marine Department pro poses to have lighthouse keepers re main in the principal lighthouses on Lake Huron throughout the winter to keep the lights burning as a gulde to vessels coming down from Port Ar thur as late as pessible in the sea son. Every possible provision will be made for their comfort. The last of lightkeepers of this season have left their posts several days later (ban usual, New Year's ( The death on Monday of F been ill for a He was aboy eaves 1 Wile ards Uglow fook place Leslie days of sixty few years and family ee Telephone 201 Auto Livery Bibby Garage gents for Dodge Bros. Motor: Cars Years of Scientific Study and Experimenting have produced the feintzman & On, Player Piano ---a wonderful musical instrument easy to play, and on account of its aluminum action and cther exclusive features, "weather proof and "wear-proof." The world's best music may be interpreted artistically and naturally without the oper- ator knowing a note of music. Brings the great composers right into your home. C. W. LINDSAY, LIMITED, Princess 8t., Kingston. Dr. Alex W. RICHARDSON Yh heen red ns Your Vote and Influ ence Respectfully Solicited for Mayor For 1916 J.S.R. McCann TO THE ELECTORS OF FRONTENAC WARD: John King FRONTENAC WARD To the Electors: mi | VICTORIA WARD. for CHOWN. | Alderman for Victoria Ward. A} "Victoria Ward Io THE ELECTORS 1 : ole r J, GR HAM A Rideau Ward At the reg wt of many of the electors of this Ward, I am of- fering myself ax nan eandlidate for Alderman, and request the support of those who think my services would he of value to the city George Laturney Rideau Ward For | Dr. C.C.Nash | aa Victoria Ward TO THE ELECTORS. Having been requested Pablic School Trustee, 1 wpectfully solicit your Boe I | I i | Aiderman fo serve asx further re vote =n infin JOHN MACGILLIVRAY. To the Electors of VICTORIA WARD, vote me as he Board of Fdn J. F. MACDONALD. JOHN M. PATRICK Machines, Um- pny Sait Cases, Trunks, repaired and re-fitted, Svs filed, Kaives and Seis- y Razors owed. All makes of Fire. Arms repaired promptly. Locks repa'red; Keys fitted. All makes of Lawn Sod Movers sharpened and 149 Sydenham St, /

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