Daily British Whig (1850), 14 Aug 1916, p. 11

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A FAMOUS BATFLEGROCND. System Now Abolished in ¢ Britain. ' ago the system of ! ntnissions in the Army i bo d Royal Warrant, med by Queefi Victoria, after the use of Lords had rejected Mr. Cardwell's Bill for the "Abolition of _. Purchase i "Previous | o "starv- | Aig n Pie 3 to that a ath in any | ing, locked himself in a ndon | gr tin jeo- | | There is pleasure at every u ever fear bow a hotel came | & first appoin | ; pase, | 204 : veslasion lea had to 06 a burl r : stage in the use of Sunlight. " Mountain House, | given the Gov price : h buttermilk was ssissbed | system may be Sad | iter olon nips | o; Pas-de-Calais In; the washing--for the A 17th and 31st d yak Shanged fio as. or fiom Mia mols i ais Da pet Da , J rod : work is greatly lightened. 8 ."™ are $12.00 ; it 5 : : In the iron- : : Agineo Vv. id , Who received a bounty for ing v _ ing--for the one within ten | every recruit and were appointed col- i bows, utterly overthrew the flower of clotheshave ] : Mor in Pat who saw ones of regiments. In some cases, : French chivalry. & . Going ne, Auguse 8h wR. t and his name | [NESS OF Mecelving bounty money | along. s ; A Telrad wane Ja, vo : : suchafresh, Return Umit, Sept. 6th, 1916. RE these gentlemen pr A Mr. Davies' literary talent evinced | man eratare an : a : J Je bough dvs siivered | MOMmiating all the oficers, and made { itdelt when, st » very early age. he| tory. It had & literature of its own oy sweet air of and caps, al delivered | coq Foi, tiny. by selling the mo Newport .|in the twelfth century and its sol- og y 4] For full particulars apply to J. P, to the hotel tn gallons and | jasions, a mode which had indeed . diers were among the most valiant in NY 2} newness. In Hanley, C. P. & T. A., corner John- 25 cents for every gallon that | prevailed from very early times. | fhe France, being known us the Gascons > NT SN : : son and Ontario streets. ot in w York . a Sraduatly the Crown took the matter of ibe North. oh atl 4 & g the wearing i Away of New y was (its own hands, raised regime) be deacons that the e province was a natura e- v3 / > : Qarroll Harper, who held a sit- | at its own expense, and recouped It- thrtied he him an Rhappy ur ground for the French and English : ~ Spd --for the tation in bis wealthy fathers bank. (If by the sale of commissions, ob- | Young Davies, however, was not al. | during the Hundred Years' War, for 8 g {hy clotheshave He was an industrious young map in- | 8IDIng a regulation price, which | Jowed to follow his Hterary bent. In| its shores extend along the North Sea % : I of a dawdler, He was anxious | YATied frofu time to time, for each | dye course he was apprenticed to 'a {snd the English Channel, Trom the h . inherited the "business, ii step up 10 that of Heutenant-colonel, * picture-framie maker, and became an | River, Aa, above Valals, to a point tA \ ¥ikh fn his own right, be stuck | sec Y0ich there was no purchase. eficient workman. The "wander-|bélow Dieppe. Fifteen miles north & the exqui- ; lust" seized him, however, and when, | of Abbeville, one of the principal -- y on the death of his grandmother, he | cities of Pieardy, is Crecy, where, Wy site pu rity com fe | officers | found fhat he benefited under "her | until late in the ninetéenth century, 10. - L . 8 1 ! Baleable commissions in | will to the extent of a féw pounds, | there still' stood the old windmill hi BY : of Sunlight Coralean A : Harper found his appetite | order that they might not lose 20Y- | he promptly paid for a passage to | from which Edward III. of England ave. 2 ¢ thing through the destruction of the | America, where he proceeded to | in 1346 watched his beloved son, the | : itself -- and Carthaginian Sep 13 old system. tramp the States in search of those | first Prince of Wales, at that time in Grampian ; A regulation price was eventually | aaventures and experiences which so | nly 16 years of age, triumph over . are c lean E Prttabinn | oe Taga fixed by the Government, which ran appealed to him. hilip of Valois. "On this occasion e from £420 for a first commission, or] ft was through trying to board a |the 'English were outnumbered four > } indeed. ensigncy in the line, to £1,200 for train that the poet, missing his foot- | to one, and they wrought terrible ? : the same position in the Guards, ing, caught bis foot in the step of the | havoc among the enemy, the losses of Each step was higher in price, and car and was dragged several yards, | the vanquished being variously esti- the lowest that a lieutenant-coloneley | the accident necessitating the ampu- | mated at from 10,000 to 30,000. One : could be obtained for was £4,200 in | tation of his leg at the ankle. of those who fell in this fight was the 2 the line and £9,000 in the Guards. 1a | It wags shortly after this that Mr, | chivalrous Jobn, King of Bohemia, : A $5,000 guarantee attests 5 Cc addition to the Government price, | Dayies u to England who, pithough blind, led "a"Heroic [ / the purity of Sunlight Soap. , re Was termed in over-regulation Dn als tned 10. B oi charge for his French ally. Some : All grocers sell it. price had to be paid to the retiring |, pair of stockings, and a handker. | RIstorians trace the Prince of Wales' 12 SMcer, Rs Jatter feesometimes €x- | chief, wrapped up in brown paper, | crest "of three ostriéh feathéfs and ceed e regulation price, and had : ¢ | the motto "Ich dien" (I serve), to = a Akagi, been establiskied by custom. although | sovereigns br bis poner. © Furie Of | this battle, the Black Brine sabe i PEEL AIL EV SATIS spot | It Was contrary to law. When an of- settled down to literary work, com- | Ing them from the fallen John in ficer retired the Government hand- posing verses, tragedies, and come- | Memory of the event. ed over to him the price of his com- | ies in the kitchen of a doss-house, | Less than 20 miles northeast of o | Mission, and his successor paid him And as no one would publish his | Crecy is Agincourt, where English { the over-regulation fee. There Were, | verses, he had a couple of thousand | archers, nearly 70 years 'later, after | however, at all times a number of copies. printed in pamphlet form, | letting fly their clouds of arrows y | | AUSONEA suv viv viv. age nen commissions given free to sons of |. f against the heavily armored nobles, Cabin and Tuisd = distinguished officers, eapecially of | "ga" dog tourer br on ero 00. | Hacked them with hatohets nr rer MONTREAL TO BRISTOL such as had been killed in action, | pew pounds, which he promptly paid |floundered helplessly in mud. Five / pie month: och) soon at a country hotel, and it {and a certain number of nominations to a London printer to print and bind | tP0usand Frenchmen of noble birth, : . | { .9 .... FELTRIA',. © hours before it Was | were in a similar manner made by an edition of 250 copies of his poems. | \Bcluding their commander, d'Albret, 3 » POLEA ,.. . ..; \ ly known to the landlord and [the Sovereign. In theory the system | mpio oost him £19 * | constable of France, fell in this bat- / 3 # i Cabin Passengers Ouly. ' the guests that Carroll Har-|of promotion by wealth was absolute- h tle, while the estimate of English Excursions , Once again, however, he was | For information apply Local Ticket standing | ly indefensible. The hardship of an doomed to disappointment. Nobody | 1058e8 Was astonishingly low, some RCT | Agent, or The Robert Heford Co. officer, unable to find money to pur- wotld buy the book, and he was chroniclers giving only 13 men at i | Limited, 50 King Street Kat, Toronto. chase his next step, being superseded thinking of destroying the lot, when | rms and 100 foot soldiers. Going Trip West | by a junior with more wealthy par. Seyeral towns of Picardy---Amiens, { ¥ : iy. ents was altogether repugnant to. a Sct lato the Nands of Me > on Soissons, and Beauvais--owe their 3; ae, 3 $12.00 | F S ] sense of justice, and the clamor rais- : names to the ancient tribes which in- : thor and critic, who read it, went / 3 TO ed in consequence brought about its ; : habited this section, known as Bel- - oe ulf~ and interviewed Davies, and wrote a : 1 , : : | WINNIPEG ERR | | | | abolition in the year 1871, column' article for an evening paper gica Secunda, when the Romans y ' _ on how he found a great poet living | Maintained armed camps along the : he § i i "Oh, it's a little more," was the re- Pharaoh's Palace, in & common doss-house. And it was valley ol the Somine. In The third ' WE MUST HAVE 4 ReturnTrip East | L Sood fr ame dwelling, ply, "but you are rich and can afford | The Museum of the University of |in this singular fashion that the en uy a ge Bo eh a . {| . 4 bedrooms, B. 3 it. What is a quarter a day to a man | Pennsylvania has made public a re- {genius of this Welsh writer became portant Qusal 0 miles' east of Pe . § $18.00 also hen house and name, was martyred at { F * J . "But it strikes me as extortion," | leader of the Eckley B. Coxe, Jr., ex- ne Sls ff. FRO small orchard; Albert mM "Well, you can take it or leave It. I |Dedition to Egypt, fn which be tells Savages and Their Teeth. oe: 'wis the BOAR of Morovia: ) J WINNIPEG St iii... 31,800 am the only dns arvund bere with but- | Of AA abpeats to he the dissovery | ,, "Co CoC CL] Rlerar was the Beart century, for{ J AF J per, vf . First class modern 1 termilk to sell, and I can put any price | that Meremptah bad in his palace at Clovi d Soi hi 1 : ANT i i "» Memphis an' archeological museum and climatic conditions of the ne- (Clovis name ssons as his capital, £ : py d Coing Dates brick dwelling; loca- it 1 like.' something like those of the present | $708 are the cause of their having | while Charlemagne designated Noyon Le ' 3 . ti i 1 day. Meremptah was the soy of Ra- | DeBUtHul teeth, but Some aythorities | G8 his principal city, and the lesser y + EN J il August17 and 31 lon exceptionally a. [meses the Great, and by many is Yspute his Shy, Iu zome parts of Cariinglans in turn similarly hon- Ad Ah FA AY BIE From Toronto Sudbury good oo, i ica, when an t has gone | © . AA altri MEE Line and East, but not z 3 ------ as described 1h tho Togk of [through the "teething period" " his | By the treaty of Arras in 1435 the AF TWh AWN including Smith's Falls - Double brick, in good us. : mouth is rinsed out with an infusion | royal towns of Ein Sotmme b Rally i TR i u Reutryw, she lan repair, 8 rooms each, . of leaves of a mative tree i 'were ceded to urgundy, u { h H | ain Line East of Sud- : The palace was discovered early in | © eon TantLy io gas on lwears Jater, after the death or Cher A BR Bury to. but not includ- central location IE Sia pnpart said. 1t to shrink, so tightening the teeth. |lés the Bold, Louis XI. 'regained ! LIAR GIR ine. Novth Bey. For particulars ap y to The natives living near the source | then. During its brief eras of i ie il 9 and Bre, trices of Balch Are caveaany, | of the Nile aimploy the roots of & Dod | PeAce the Drovince thrived 4s a concd | iy IR} Seo: The palace was about 180 feet long | bearing plant to relieve he, (ire of the weaving industry, Flemish" Tay i El aT i and 100 feet wide and contained {While another tribe farther west use , Immigrants having introduced the Ln f irom Jaron. - 3s . - 9 i Shaptiresy Zoom HE tuicn, 8 dee soa fo Ah a" __ S_ Bl =. eT WaS & ma, t chamber of about hv X » | R . : | . : = 60x40 ag Shamser.of abou used in this country is, of course, un- Australia's "Slackers." i ; a : 4 0 Particulars_flom JP, Clarence 8t., : ' In describing this room the mus- | known to the savages, but many of a" : Ticket Office, Cor. eum announcement stated that "it 1s | them have a most effective substi- alan rain has recruiting tagubioa Princess and Wei: Phones 1035 or 1020, probable that this throne room, if tute. They vce a piece of wood from says on the subject: ' Phone 1107. hs Rot the same, is similar to the one (certain trees which contain bemefieial | 0 "0" Won 0 the recruiting staff . . A Tot of things are proven suc- in which Moses and Aaron confront- | qualities. Further, this stick is free put jt--something will. have to be ai cesses theoretically that are failures ed the Pharaoh, demanding that the | from the great objection to brushes. done. "Look at the trams going to Some men are experts at-making The man who really is superior to practically. people of Israel be permitted to go. |It can be renewed at very frequent the race course last Saturday!" he. |Te80lves--failures in carrying them |others never seems to be aware of One thing is certain, you can't kill The authorities in Egypt admit that | intérvals, and is thus always fresh said: "They were packed to suffoca- | OU! the fact. anvidea by brute force. 8 a great discovery has been made." and wholesome--a great advantase ion' with young men all, or rather" In the rooms were found gold | over the tootlibrush of elvilized races. 'the majority, of military age. They ornaments, scarabs, vessels, and . had already seen the cables telling of Yyanes, Ss gat Juteresting Bud, the Memorial to Warneford, the fight in the North Sea, ling ot port stated, was a collection of re- | 1 \ would not appeal to them. It was In the town of Wilts a unique ho Nes, Pi ye oy ia Stae A ge us memorial will be erected to Flight [the most™Qisgusting sight I ever wit- 4500 B.C.), which indicated that | Lieutenant Warneford, who brought (Messed, snd yt these people arro- Meremptah 'was a collector much like | 30¥R & Zépelin from an aeroplane | E&te to ne 0 Jhme of modern men or nations. The stone | \38t summer and was himself killed Sports. While these young able- implements {heluded knives, razors, | With 8 jourualist in a flylng aceident Jolled Hen. o3 Should ve forced aicinase xnives, " {a tew days Inter. into the firing line if they won't vol- sickles, ) ) The memorial will be erected by |uUnteer, were going out to back their the contributions of the Warneford ers Ma thousands, we had an ex- Kitchener Heir in Navy. family in all parts of the world, in- whieh would shame them if The new Earl Kitchener's only son | cluding the British Isles, France, | they wére capable of shame. A white- and heir, Commander Henry Kitch- |]taly, India, New Zealand, Caliada, |Dhalred man came into the office and ener, will be styled Viscount Broome, | and Axtigua. = ; unblushingly gave his gge as 44 years after the family seat near Canter-| The famous exploit of \young|and 11 months. 'Just in time,' he bury, Broome Park. Viscount | Warneford has reunited the family, said, 'can't help my hair being white; Broome, who is nearly 40, has been | matty mémbers of which had entirely | that was due to a shock.' We passed {I ; h & commander in the navy for several | got out of touch with their kinstolk, | Rim through only to learn the next | | : 2 years and has acquired a reputation {The Rev. H. L. Warneford, who or- {day that his real age was 70. That| J » sb 4 : BS I as a gubnery expert. He has an only ganized the memorial work, is to | Would make a good story for the 'real B o ; C EI Bs 4 . BE Jee OE ea jot from Dr. Clarence S. Fisher, | known. ronne gets its i 1s 5 § i ii fret sister, Norah, the wife of a captain | write a family history. The earliest [Sports® in Pitt Stréét to-day, who of artillery, re Viscount Broome 18 [known Warneford was instructor in | come = £3itle up Sad Sheet Jhelr ; 3 arried the second in succession to Charlemagne, great - | winni © anything . i : kindly |, , Kitchener peerage is now Lt. Jan te son except conscription with these 'real 40 000 F arm Laborer S Wanted Henry Kitchener, of the Royal Fly- Sorta. Jyhat ie inthe them 9 Ve RIAA ? ing Corps. This young officer, "K. ould make Bary man : Ww ; of K.'s nephew, was engaged to be Sa . leave the country. $12.00 TO INNIP, EG y married last Mareh, and the an- fixing ; nouncement of his Arranged With Enemy, betrothal was {the prices of flour in { A : r - made on the sam day as that of his | Principal cities. of ani uel Sed whem |X SPECIAL TRAIN SERVICE 3 E || Sister; PHiUpSS. The price of Sour 1s just 2ow that shows bow Austria vas Leave T to Union Station 11 p.m., Aug. 17th, 19th, 31st, and | Senator Belcourt Took Air Trip. : are 12 in" : A visitor to 8 West-end restaurant f Sept. 2nd. Senator Beleourt, while visiting tralia, than in London, being waited on by a par- THROUGH TRAINS WITH LUNCH COUNTER CARS ATTACHED Aldsrahot. 3 yu given what was.called is Axed Heulasly, jai and Ane-looking waiter | 7 2 g ar " 4 wi re. accent, asked the man "Roa. | bis rikionalt HE EXCURSION DATES Ob; I'm a Hungarian," - Aug. 17thand 81st . From Toronto east to Chaffey's Locks and Kingston, also north to How comes it, then, that a big, : . ' . strong fellow lke you is not in the | DESTINATION TERRITORY---Tickets one-half i RETURN FARE AND LIMIT--One-half cent | b Sl - in : \ e Vig or. § cent per mile (minimum 650c) til Sept. 30th, per mile (minimum 50¢) to Winni on or be- Li relieved J 's the Use. Well, sir, it's like this," replied 1916, west of Winnipeg to any station east of fore Nov. 30th, 1916, plus $18.00 trom Winnipes ! ] . the knight of the napkin, pointing to | ; is, { marked, that, while he could think e can learn much from a study | brother waiter a fow tables off €alyary. Edmonton and Tasints, Alla. Il} to original starting pom, * * CW a bro 'of several phrases which of inséct life, Even the tho 1 "You see that man? Well, he's of farm laborers required at each pow sere Bis experienc, rnin Ben Fo dota ro Buch KiCeIoe as the ork, wad we bave val you sll main | , ol ad Sentosa oN ua Gy Ag." hue Naud, up A word of encouragement is like oil to machinery that peeds it, 3 col fo ani ack ag diffi- You and I speak In pratse of ourl or else quiet,

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