Daily British Whig (1850), 6 Mar 1916, p. 4

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.+ France can speak most feelingly of v "he fall in battle. ,00 yD offices. 2.50 Bh tates ceed Wesliy R Edit ax vesse 3100 aid ir in ics 1.60 year, to. United States ....,.$1.50 Six and hoe months pro rata. tached Is one of the best Canada. yo offices In job TORON' REPRESENTATIVE HE Jmaliplece o in .32 Church Bt. New York kc Office EA 5 Fifth A t e. Frank R. Northrup, A a . Chie: Tribune Bia. Manage A TRIBUTE TO WORTH. One who served his country and fellow men as unostentionsly as the late Capt: George Richardson can never be appraised at his true worth. It is a quality of some peo- ple to conceal the thoughts that in- fluence them or the acts through which these thoughts find expression. The Whig had its own estimate of this young man, having discussed with him some of the questions that affected the.city,and the commurmtyd in which he lived. The Whig recalls the deliberatién with which he arranged for his over- Seas service. He did not say much. He was not talkative, He simply decided when the first call for ser- vice came that his place was in the ranks, and he made his plans ac- cordingly. - Much-hias been revealed in the last few months of the man- ner in which he consecrated himself and his talents to the cause which he espoused. He was very consider- ate of the men in arms. He gave evidence of that from his first meet- ing with them. They realized what a chivalrous leader they had in all theirf preparedness in England. Those who survive the conflicts in his kindness, his forethought, his sacrifices -for them, his valour; his devotion, and his death. Thd passing of a figure at once €0 manly, help ful and heroic, is universally 're- gretted. That regret becomes the deeper in view of what is now known of Capt. Richardson's bequests. At a time when the outlook of the war could not be measured with any degree of accuracy, he bethought himself of its possible contingencies. Calmly, with much care &s to detall, he out- lined what his executors would have _ to do in his name and behalf should His munificence is in keeping with the nobility of his character. He has given un- stintedly and thoughtfully to the Causes that lay most heavily upon his heart. Art, physical culture, | charity, education, all of these had | his recognition, and for all of them |: he has provided most generously. The families of his men, who went to the front with him who fought with him, who gave with him their lives, the richest of all offerings to a na- tion, will rise*and call him blessed. "The children, some of whom never met him, will lisp his name i v= erence and affection. In afte: TS all of them will remember him their great benefactor. ERUPTION AT THE OOAST. 'The British Columbia Government is doomed. That fact has been fore- shadowed by the defeat of one min- ister in Vancouyer,and by the narrow escape from defeat of another min- ister in Rossland. A third bye-elec- tion occurred in Victoria on Sat- urday. The eandidates were Hon. Mr, Flummerfelt and H. W, Brew- ster. The one Is a member of the Government who had'to go back to his people for re-election before the meeting of the house, and his op- 'ponent was the leader of the op- position. Of all the bye-elections fol- lowing the reconstruction of the cabinet, through the retirement of Sir Richard MoBride, this in Vie- toria was the supreme test as to the strength or weakness of the Gov- ernment. The fact that Mr. Flummerfelt did not secure the support of half as 'many electors as Mr, Brewster in a + the Premier and his colleagues will 'save themselves greater humiliation by resigning st once. They cannot survive the general election which is slated for June. They cannot face a demoralized Legislature with two empty ministerial seats, for the men who cannot command the confidence | of the people at the polls cannot | presume to legislate and manage the | people's business. | A (Cpnservative print intimates | that Sl Cavern has fallen upon | evil days because it has undertaken | to develop the province by railways | which it aided by a guarantee ot/ contract for the Russian locomotives, | # their bonds to the extent of many! many millions. The province has | not been called upon to pay the in- terest on these securities, but it may | be called upon at any time to do so. The liability is real enough. The un- popularity of the Government is not due to the railway deals, serious as they have been, but to the land policy of the Government which has operated in favor of the rich and against the poor, and to the general mismanagement that has at- tended a moraband ministry. Sir Richard McBride left the Gov- good. He pushed a predecessor, Hon. | Mr: Turner, out of a provincial office | in London, and settled down to en-| joy life at a fat salary, He gmile while his friend Bowser worries | in Victoria and prepares for his po- litical funeral. Cx eranfent at a good. time----for his own EDITORIAL NOTES. The Board of Education appears | | to be talking In large figures. Other | boards are talking in much smaller | figures. common-sense of the present time? Who is the Kingston merchant | who got an order for military sup-| plies and, according to the complaint | which has been sent to Ottawa farmed it out to a German firm in| Montreal? Our delegates to the Road Con- | vention have returned home. Now | for something solid in the .way of | suggestions. Let our aldermen, however, remember that the war is stil} owcand that , economy is the need of the hour. i Imports in England are to 'be re- | stricted or prohibited in certain ar-| ticles including pulp paper, tobacco, | sugar, frulf, and barley for spirit- | making, but there is no proposal as| yet to curtail the supply of parley | for beer-making. The brewers will | return thanks for this small favor Hon. Robert Rogers spent some | time at the Coast last year. He was | on public business. Incidentally, he looked into the political situation | and gave some advice. He was not | expecting the eruptioh that has ta- ken place politically, and must rea- | lize that his grip is falling in the] West. | have at thei The Government seems to commandeered the grain wrong time. Prices have fallen, | and they are still falling. Perhaps | our Commerce Department can un- | load on some one, or nation, ahd per- haps it cannot. It may get a lesson that will keep it out of the comman- | deéring business for all time. THE DAILY AILY BRITISH WHIG, MONDAY, MARC at fictitious prices, based upon the possibility of a real estate boom, should be taxed upon speculative ® value, farm lands upon productive value only. More than any other province in|® the Dominion British Columbia needs | a back-to-the-land movement. Let|® ner reverse the former policy and] give the rich land to the many to use| 4 and her troubles will soon come to] & it WAR BULLETINS. The Russians have made much progress on the Dueister river, : 3 ; -- Zeppelins raided the north- east coast of England; damage done not yet known. BS | was a woman, an end. 3 A FINE OUTLIOOK. | Canadian Locomotive Works Busy | For Next Year. A month or six weeks from now, | will see the completion of the entire | | which the Canadian Locomotive | Company has had in hand and which | { were secured about a year ago. The! | company has on hand at the present | time, sufficient orders from Canad- | ian sources to keep the entire plant working to capacity for the -next twelve months at least. An official of the Canadian Locomotive Comn-| pany states that Canadian railways have held off the purchase of rolling stock equipment for such a long time that they find themselves prac- | tically compelled to enter the market in order to take care of track ex- tensions. The Locomotive Company's fiscal year ends June 80th, and from the | present outlook the result of opera- | tions will be the best year in its his- { tory. -- ---- / _ Avother Heroine? Amsterdam, March | dlesblit says that the German court martial in Brussels has sentenced | | three more Belgians, one of whom | to imprisonment with | | hard labor. . Marguerite Blanckaert | | was sentenced to prison for life for | treasonable acts against the German |. administration, a former polic eman | named Alexander Daume to two years | { for issuing false passports, and Gus- Hing soldiers. It is believed there are- from forty to fifty thousand German dead in front of Verdun. Err et eed A total of five more steamers, are reported sunk during the + "week-end. { | Cree eeb Perret ete ed BR dated asd tL ARaasssas] RUN-DOWN WOMEN. i Boy ~ | we Have a Remedy That Will Cost | You Nothing If It Does Not Help You. lize that we mean just what we say | in the above heading. { the followingprove the efficiency of | | Vinol in such cases: -- "For the benefit of the other tired | | women, I want to say that I keep { house for seven in my family. I be- came rhin-down, all played out, I did not seem to have any life'in me and looked badly. I read so much about Vinol I decided to try It and I must] say it helped me in every way. Iti built me up so I felt like a new wo- | 6.--The Han-&man, and my friends said that could | fs see a great change in me.' Mrs. | John M. Waldron, §.Y NY, a We recommend Vinol to our cus tomers as the greatest strength cre | ator we know---due to the extractive ers, without oil, combined with pep- tonate of fron and beef peptone, all | dissolved in a pure medicinal wine Which appeals most to the { taaf Minenolet to one year for hid-| Geo. W. Mahood, Druggist, Kingston, | Ont. "Low Cost of Living" Menu Menu for Tuesday BREAKFAST Stewed Apricots Boiled Egmgs Tonst Doughnuts LUNCHEON Potate Chowder Tounted Crackers s Mustard Pickles Orange Shortenke DINNER Puree of Lima Beans Fish and Spaghetti Vie Baked Potatoes Spinach Calcutta Salwml Baked Coconnut Custard ~ ' ~ BREAKFAST. Raised Doughnuts--Mix a cup and |a half of sugar, two caps of milk, | quarter of a cup of butter, two eggs, { half a teaspoon of 'soda, and one yeast cake. Mix with enough flour ito make as stiff as bread dough. Knead at night but not again. Turn out on the beard, let rise half an hour and fry in deep. boiling fat, LUNCHEON. Potato Chowder--Pare eight pota- toes and cut in thin slices. Cover with two cups of water and simmer twenty minutes, Add seasoning and serve. It should 'be thick enough from the starch in the potatoes, if too thick, add some water boil one minute longer DINNER Puree of Lima Beans-- tender cups of water. coarsessieve, Mash through a add a cup of water and! Kingston women will please rea- | Letters like! Saratoga Springs, | but | and | not for his Father or his They come from ma Boys' Garments--doing vear but making Boys' ( right. { Special and $6 values, for SMALL and $6 values, for medicinal elements of fresh cod liv-| BOYS' SUI'TS--Sizes 2 and $8.50 values, fo SEE OUR NEW HIGI military stvle Noi Prices Boil until |; two cups of beans with four| r Our Boys' Clothes at 8 to 33; regular $7, sg' e made for the Boy and | Older Brother ! igs kers who specialize on nothing from vear to 'lothing, and making it Prices BOYS' SUITS--Sizes 26 to 32; regular $5.00 $3.75 BOYS' SUITS--Sizes 3 to 8 vears; $5 $7.50 r I SCHOOL folk, SUITS -- Bloomer pants. $7.50 and $8.50 ibbys two cups of milk and boil ten min- | utes. Season and serve. v ° Fish and Spaghetti Pie minutes one pound of fish and drain and flake. Boil enough spaghetti to make two cups. Blend two spoons of botter 'with three of flour, add two cups of milk{ boil until thick | and season. Plfee a layer of spag-| hetti in a baking dish, then a layer | of fish, then a layer of white sauce and a few slices of hard boiled eggs. | Continue until the dish is full. Cover | all with bread crumbs, a tablespoon of melted butter brown. Calenita Salad---Beat a cream cheese until smooth, then add a! quarter of avcup of grated American | i Boil ten! table-| and bake until} (Guarante a Bb, 5.000 miles) 30x3 1-2 Plain Tread Casings aes 30x3 1- 2 Chain Tread Il Auto Tire & Vulcanizing Co., cheese, half a cup of whipped cream, | half a teaspoon of dissolved gelatine | and one teaspoon of boiling water. | Beat together five minutes and serve on lettie with a French dressing, to which has been added a teaspoon RANDOM REELS "Of Shoes and Ships, and Sealing, Wax, of Cabbages aad Kiags" Sir George Foster, answering an | % enquiry in the Commons, says there are 756,349 males between twenty | and twenty- nine years of age and| $68,214 males between thirty , and | thirty-nine years of age, and of all these 62 per cent ure eligible for military service. Will they be se- cured under the voluntary system? | Not according to present indications. TIME. Time is one of the few articles us-. ed by the ultimate consumer which | cannot be put in cold storage. It time were like the fresh country egg | and could be packed in salt for the use of generations yet unborn, what | a blessing it would be to people who are beginning to run short. As it | 1s, however, time exaporates faster than any other product on earth ex- | capt tank wagon gasolene. KINGSTON EVENTS 26 VEARS AGO E. Bricoland, Wolfe Island reports the birth of a quartétte of lambs. | The mgther has givén birth to trip-| ats 'on three previous occasions. The lambs are very healthy. | A chime of bells will be placed in| St. Andrew's Church. i A fortune teller is reaping a har-| vest among He young men and maid-| of the city. e Street Railway Company will | ask permission to connect Williams-| iville with its main track. LIBERAL PRESS. | Trouble in British Columbia. Toronto Globe. "The rich land has been given to the few; the hills to the many." W. H. Hayward, a member of the British Columbia Legislature, who acted as chairman of the Provincial Ro¥al Commission on Agriculture, tells the Associated rds of Trade of the south-western, districts of the province that "thé rich land has been given to the few; the hills to the many." Mr. Hayward has very definite ideas as to the elimination of the speculator so that the rich lands of British Columbia may become avail iin other respects, i Hze what it i | ive ways of wasting time, all, Time is a good deal like gasolene too. It is highly inflammable, and is béing burned every day by people. who never re- is- worth until they look into the bottom of the can and find that they are about out. There would be less time burned in the | pursuit of ductign bridge, the sex novel and pin-pool if people could look ahead and see the eid of the yardstick. Also, there would be fewer business failures recorded by | Messrs. Pun and Bradstreet if more time were expended in monthly col- lections and writing advertisements | and less in keeping up with Sam Crawford's batting average. There are several thousand effect. 0 which have beem discovered and put into active operation. One of the most successful of these is the habit of dropping in on a busy business man and discussing everything from the cause of the Franco-Prussian war to the best cure for the quinsy. This habit appears to.be increasing in jn- tensity, and has alréady been respon- sible for a number of hasty funerals: When a man has more time on his hands, than he knows what to do with, he should retire to the hay- mow and sleep off the surplus, in- stead of trying to divide with some- bday who wishes there were 365 days in each month Under our present-system of regu- lation there is a very unequal dis- tribution of time. Lots of men who were always liberally supported by | their wives and could just as well be spared. as not are g'ven an extra large chunk of time, and live for a great many years after the com munity has become reconciled to their departure. When we see strong, big-hearted citizens cut down in middie life and then note the du. | rability of the octogenarian dead- | beat, we are sometimes inclined to] dhestion the wisdom ~of Providence. | We would all value time more highly if it came in a steel tank, like lubricating oil, so that we could see how much was left after a joy ride. ere Rippling Rhymes Old Hunx halt or gout. have "smallpox or bunions; Pd up with turnips and onions, and live THE HERMIT : is a hermit and mystic, his manuer is stately and grave, his dict his antiphlogistic, he spends all his years in a cave. "is a wonder, although I'm as old as get out; rheu- matics don't pull me asunder, I have not the string- warble my optimis 1" full of sunshine and hope: EE La cities, I always was swallowing dope. shingles or colic, or Bright's jystly famous disease; the rheumatiz often would frolic all over my fetlocks and knees. If man would keep grief in the distance, and feel like a Percheron steer, he must lead the sim ple existence, and cut out the urban career." Ph i Jay We Jag 0 Deavy 5 Drive : e far fro staying, just think of the he bright HENis You re "My health;" he remarks, but when I resided in I always lad "Me- fun fhat you miss! I'd rather have seven-year itch, than fill in a cave or ahditeh ! i» of | 3 |LIBBY'S water drink which helps overcome | | | ~ TRY CALIFORNIA CANNED FRUITS Pears Peaches Pineapples Apricots Black Cherries Royal Anne Cherries Green Gage Plums Jas. Redden & Co. " Phones 20 and 990. a URIC ACID IN MEAT BRINGS RHEUMATISM Says a little Salts in water may | save you from dread { attack. Rheumatism is easier to avoid than ito cure, states a well-known author- ity. We are advised to dress warm- lv; keep the feet dry; avold expos- ure; eat less meat, but drink plenty | lof good water. £ Rheumatism is a direct result of] {eating too much meat and other rich foods that produce uric acid which ist absorbed into the blood. It is the 'function of the kidneys to filter this acid from the blood and cast it out! iin the urine; the pores of the skin {are also a means of freeing the blood | {of this impurity. In'damp and chil- ily cold weather the skin pores are closed thus forcing the kidneys to-do double work, they become weak afd sluggish and fail to eliminate the 'uric acid which keeps accumulating and circulating through the system, - muscles 'causing stiffness, and pain called rheumatism. At the first twinge of rheumatism get from any pharmacy -about four ounces of Jad Salts; put a tablespoon- ful in a glass of water and drink be- fore breakfast each morning for a week. This is said to eliminate uric acid by stimulating the kidneys to normal action, thus ridding the blood of these impurities. - Jad Salts is inexpensive, harmless and is made froin the acid of gra and lemon juice, combined with li- thia and is used with excellent re- sults by thousands of folks who are subject to rheumatism. Here you have a pleasant, effervescent lithia- soreness uric acid and is benefiéial kidneys as well, alte Your Phone 1417. + eventually settling in the joints and IA (Guaranteed "3;500" miles) Casings .. (Guar anteed 3,0 JO miles) THE TIRE SHOP Ford Owners 30x3 1-2 Nobby Tread Casings $13.00 each 206 Wellington St. MONUMENTS !! By placirig your orders direct with us you see exactly what vou | are buying and as we employ no agents vou save the middleman's profit. Buy now and have your work set up early in the spring. J. E. MULLEN Cor. Princess and Clergy Sts. Kingston, Ont. JOHN M. PATRICK | . ' Sewing Machines, Um- LOW SETTLERS' FARES To All Points in 'Western Canada | By the New i COAST TO. COAST ROUTE - i Electric Lighted Tourist Cars. For our booklet, "Homeseekers' | and Settlers' Guide," tickets, and in- i formation, apply to R. H. Ward, Sta- {tion Agent, or M. ce. Duan, City | Agent. ETE NORTHERN CES WIRELESS Local Branch Time Table IN EFFECT MAY 30TH, 1915. Trains will leave and arrive act City pot, fool SE iahngon" street. , 19--ail . 13--Fast EB . 3T--Lecd. 1--intl. . T--Magl .-31--Loecal to Belleville . 6.58 p.m. Gi Enst. [ Lv. City. , 18--Mail 1.40 am. 16---Iast Ex. .. 258am. , l--L,ocal lo Brockville 6--Malil . 14--dntl. DLid.. No. 238--~Local to Brockville . 658 pm Xo 0, 12, 14, 18, 18, Rg 'other trains dally except Direct route to Toronto, Hamilton, Tr Londos, Shicago, Ba Ad Saginaw, Mon tawa, gusbet Portland, t. Halifax, ston and New York. For full particulars apply J. P. HAN- 3Y, Raliroad and Steamship Agent, cor. Johnson and Ontario streets. . Jam repa Saws flled, Knives and Scis- + Sharpened, Razors Bord, All makes of Fire- arms repaired promptly. Locks ; Keys fitted. All makes of Lawn Mowers sharpeneidl and repaired. 1490 SYDENHAM STREET. Probably it doesn't draw well because the coal used is unscreened and dirty. TRY OUR COAL and your fuel troubles will be happily over. Nor does our coal cost anv more tham- the un-| satisfactory kind. CRAWFORD, PHONE 0. Foot of Queen Street.

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