Daily British Whig (1850), 7 Nov 1918, p. 4

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PAGE FOUR THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1913. THE BRITISH WHIG 85TH YEAR P shed Daily and 9 E BRITISH WwWHIG CO, LIMITED, Eliott ., ..... .. sident | Gulla .. Edit ir and J. G. . Mans aging<Pirector.] Leman A a elephonen: Business Otlice "on Eattorial Rooms ve we Jub Office as rae NUD BSC RIFTION RATE (Daily Edition) Une year, delivered in city One year, if paid in advance . r, by mall to rura; offices 0 United States .. ,. 1i- Weekly Hdition) by mail, cash .... . 51.00 . If not paid in advance $1.50 ar, to Uniteg States .. ...$1.50 ind three months pro rata, One ye ar, 1x TT ----------------------------_- . TTMON r itiaL, REPRESENTAT IVE R. Bruce Owe L123 St. Peter St FoR, Norte ap "Sas Fifth Ave, New York ¥.R.Northrup, 1510 Ass'n Bldg, Chicago Editor are pa ablisher i name of the Letters to the only over the actual writer Attached is one of the "best Jol printing offices tn Canada The circulation of THE BRITISH Whig is authenticated by the ABC Audit Burean of Clrculations. - - itn The war + epidemic, | the strike epi- demic, the . influenza epidemic Next, : Wear your buttons and display your 'window cards. It will help | ~.along the Vietory Loan campaign. Somebody is bound tor i say it and | it. might as well be us: The are fast knocking the Hun Hungary. out of | The Allies have ihe full measurs | of the Hun. The terms of the armistice infolve complete sur-| render; nothing is left to his good faith. It is to be hoped that the terms! of peace imposed upon Germany will™e such as to form a constant reminder to Germans for some years of the enormity of what they have done.. "We've got the Germans down and the referee Jas counted nine. Are we gbing to give them a chance to get up?" inquires James W. Gar- ard, former American ambassador to Berlin, Well, it doesn't look iike it, James. President Wilson: 'is' preparing a: other note. Oue doesn't usually write notes to burglars and assass- ins. One just simply knocks them on the head or calls in the police who. operate on the unconditional surrender plan. According to letters received fron the front, Huns, hid in empty cof: fihs near the Beillcourt cemetory, attempted ah ambuscade of C* Com- 'pany of the 108th U.S. Infantry When it was over, the Yanks put the Hans back in the coffims, ani the incident was lofed. The fiend - ish' camouflage falled to 'hold up the advance. If the United States, remarks th» Oswego Palladium, had put the time and money into teaching Eng: lish to foreigners which she put in- "to teaching German to Americans there would have been no need for establishing schools at the military camps to teach the foreign soldiers the meaning of "gun," "cannon." . "Forward, march," and "On to Ber- lin.' May the lesson mot be lost on Canada. : 5 et -- pu -- 3 i - DISCOVERING CA. "Did the Irish discaver America?" rung a hoadline in: the Syracuse PostsStandard. Don't know as to _ that, but we do know that they dis- covered All the jobs on the police . forces, a HE CRIMINALS, Royal criminals. are not better , . Kiud of criminals, the same fate. in ment should "be sreater tnasmuch as their Oppor- tunities for doing gobd instead of 'able neighbor than the professor at "Kingeton. Canada, who. is growing "germs hy the aon feo 2) Demo Semi-Weekly by | PUBLISHING | | MONTHLY Allies | | our GOOD NAME AT STAKE. Kingst é erto tail- ed to d in a worthy never ibution placed jective name of Every citi bili And eve itizen should to day gnize that he must do futm or our effort will fall shor THE PRISONERS FREE. bond buy he longed-for day Canadian p ners ds will be set free of their SET Eve you when th: in Help to captivity it to r 12,300 4 man har | unlock | Then | joice leelebrati their ret You are i¥ou have the door a 'rig that have take part in on which will. welcom arn. When that day co going to feel pretty cheap if failed to do your part you will and NEWSPAPERS VERSUS MAGAZINES. In these flays when world histor; is being made every day, the public are ever on the outlook for est news of what going on Europe, and, indeed, all over the world. The despatches on the news- paper bulletin boards, hot from the cables, are.eagerly dévoured, and fresh news awaited with impatience The public wants the news and must have it fresh. For for information on all subjects of interest, they have two main sourc- es of supply, -namely, newspapers and magazines. Both fill a large place in the education and enlight- {ment of the nation. Bat to-day the day of the daily newspaper, DAILY is this news, is tha 0 n which serves up to its readeis news despatches and special ar- ticles that are up-to-date and fresh | from the writer, cables or the pen of tha Every day brings tremen- dous and important changes in the situation, so that the newspaper whieh most truly servés the public Is the one which, by maintaining up-to-date cable connections and keeping in touch with doings all the {world over, gives its readers news almost simultaneously the occurrence of events. This is one thing that the magaz- ine cannot do. Most magazines usu- ially go Into the printer's hands one or two months before they are re- {ceived by the public, and, therefore, j their contents cannot he considered up-to-date, or by any means the last word in world | events. Some notable instances {of _ this have occurred recently, and they serve to emphasize the { fact that the newspaper is the only imedium which really supplies news. In the October number of Harper's magazine there appears an article by Major-Gen. Sir Frederick Maur- ice entitled, "Great Britain's Bast- ern Ventures." This article must 'have been written some time in July or August, and vei it is served up to the public in October. It séems almost ridiculous in the light of events which oceurred in the inter- vening period. For Instance we read: wita | "At a time wher Paris and Calais are not wholly out of dang- er, and the .eyes of the world are fixed upon the bloody struggle on the western front, it is very na- tural that it should be asked why British troops are holding Bag- dad and Jerusalem." And this is given to the public a! a time when the Hindenburg lae in France has been smashed, and !Lo German army streaming backward towards its own frontiers; at a time when thé enemy have been chajed oat of half of Belgium; at a time when the British: army from Jeru- saiom has completely - routed tho Porte and caused tiem to withdraw from active partic.pation in the war, aud to begin (5 feel the wa# towards peace. During the "{ me which «lapsed betwesn the wring ot this article and iis appearance, the menuee to Calals and Paris dis- appea. i; and complete victory at- tonded, Great Bri'yin's Baswin Army. What was intended to ba the, latest werd om the subject by a eminent authority is "n reality ani. quated and two months" behind the times. Any newspapi which dr» te do Buch a thing woald be. in save danger of extinction. : Another case of ith same kind, & tase of a prominent aagazine pk Tishivg news two months too Ia'a is found fn the American Review of Reviews for October. In that issue there appears a summary of tho 'war, entitled, "Forward all along the Front," from the pen of Frank military critie. It also must have been written many weeks previous to publication, as the following rex tracts will show: . "Wa must dismiss any notion that the controlling purpose of our great commander och) is to take territory or BL whe- ther the iron mines of of Briey or the coal mines of Lens. We must perceive that not ®ven the ex- pulsion of the German from France is the underlying object- ive of Foch Further on we read: _ "The German still holds all of 3 y 'Wuch of France, Fin- land 48 his, Poland is his, Ru- mania is under his fest, and Bul garia under ny" thum ; Serbia ; At his! mercy, Hymb eves of stark bot maple the ho is stil ] reached the 1 will briag |g Ger- | grand | mes, | the la!-| in | the | H. Simond®) a prominent American 3 & a ---- Pour a little AP on your plate H.P. is thick, fruity, and delicious -- can be taken with the meat just 'rance; Ru- of German nt victor I at country Bulgaria Thad surrender uncondi- Allied in time Foch had issu- 1i8 famous order: "We shall econ- ue to pursue the enemy impilae- A complete change of events taken place, which made rticl Simond's seem ancie land foolist His attempts at pro- een completely disprov- armies | 's of these Y to blame the victims y are obliged their material and go tp maga fourse, the publis! \gazines are not entire They in some w of circumstances. Ti are assemble many weeks before the press zine is and they take th the [time actually published, any change in in the mear Therefore as a dispenser o the unreliable {to fo 1 |? like mustard, chance of eourse of events In The Casual Pte, James Arthur tisted in the Canadian Field Arti! at Cobourg in July, 1915, and tra ! ferred to the 59th Battalion, He} drained with.that unit at Barriefield camp and Cornwall, anad went ove r-| .| 8eas in April, 1916. In the casualty list of Oct.-24th he was reported wounded, and he is now reported having died of wounds news magazine is Reynolds The newspaper takes no sucl It before it an hour or he reader, hance goes to press redches stopped at an lat pan to tho two 88 can be the despatches and the pre moment for insertion of the est Thus the news as are of ers in public the very est and newest of often within an As a dis- | news, the daily no It per demanded of i and pe a4 position to serve His- next } 3 kin reside in i Campbellford. the world's events, - ugs, Beetles, Mos- | quitoes and all insects killed sure and certain. by Keating's Powder Make {no mistake. "K tin * kills. Sold in tins only, 10c¢, ¢. When the Bugs and Fleas are meeting, death steps in by means of Keating Har- old F. Ritchie and Co., Limitedy To- ronto, agents for Xanada of their happening penser of reliable newspaper has equal forms a service the publie, rforms it in' { be equalled by : Let the and the increased the | Gifts for your friends in the tional service must he bought Study the store ads. Get sugges oo for suitable rememberances Sehetedi diate dedosk doadedesdeodeodobodadediddedododofe ER esstssrssissasssssased that cannot medium ise this, sole | greatly Bream HR * nothing else will make you might try } port for dail * If % your old car go, {% a Want Ad. i na now tions EA A Rinping Rhymes THE GREAT TONIC | { No doubt all ailing critters, aweary of their illls, | yet found their ailments chronie, to their intense des-/ have taken Simpson's bitte rs, or Popoff's purple pills," pair, until they tried this tonic--the crisp November air. I've lapped up Johnson's syrup of seaweed, prunes and cheese and it would merely stir up new symptoms of disease; the doctor's diagnosis has often | made me snort; I've taken dope in doses, a spoonful | to a quart; Fve piled on porous plasters, I've worn them inside out, to head off puch disasters as rheum-| atiz and gout. In all the drugs of healing there's 8 nothing to compare with this, of which I'm spieling, the crisp November air. I'm living, at this writing, | from all my ailments free; I'm fit for fun or. fight-| ing, or shinning up a tree. No more you see me ETOD- ing in cupboards for my pills, RO _MOre you see me: doping my works for sundry ills, for organs dislocated, | for falling of the hair; I've been rejuvenated by crisp November air. I'm active, blithe and sprithly, my gait is free and bold; I trot around as lightly | as any ten-year-old; my enemies. I've throttled, disease and pain and | care; it really should be bottlé, this crisp November air. | -- WALT MASON. J Talk No, 4. Why Rates NE-thousand-and-seven public utility en- Go Up! 0 terprises in Canada and the "United Slates, up to July 31, 1918, have heen granted by regulatory commissions. authority] to inerease their rates. Among these have been! 331 gas. Plants, 280 electric light and power; plants, 220 city and interurban electric roads] | 36 water plants, 79 telephone systems, 61 hot] waler and steam plaints, . Just to give an instance op two from our OWN experience :-- . ik i uy To run a pair of long-distance wires (one cirenit) on our poles from Montreal to Ottawa) has just cost us $20.12%. A similar circuit on the .sime poles in 1913 cost $12,870. A circuit just, completed from Toronto fo Hamilton cosl $7.396. A similar circuit in 1913 cost $4,730. 1 & A mile of undergrotind cable, put down in Toronto has just cost $8,976. The same work | and material in 1913 cost $6, 072 2 A mile of &-duet conduit in Toronto has cost $12,672. In 1913 the cost was $8,448. Such increases in cost affecting al of our our work, in of rigid prc honk, present revenues i 'to enable meet our obligations to employees, ers and patrons. ', - us to wy . ¥ = -- STYLE HEADQUARTERS Where Society Brand Clothes we Bwdctidol Lo » / Society Brand Glnthes 4 © AD.acC The New Suit "The Militaire" Society brand tailoring. Plain greens, greys and brows. Prices: $30, $32.50, $35.00, $27. 50. he New Devonshire Overcoats Heavy Scotch Cheviots . $25.00 $28, $30, $35.00, $42.50 RB Deity i | Bibbys TWEED HATS 78.80.82 Princess Street 3 A ee st ca tr Srp i. NEW TWEED HATS a + Kingston, Ont. ------ Pure Clover Honey In the Comb is very scarce this year. We have a small quantity which we are selling at _ 40c. per Section. Redden & Co. EXTENSION 'LADDERS Light and eo for putting up storm windows. them jin 24, 28, 30, 82, 36 foot lengths. BUNT?'S We stock Jas License Nos. 8-459, 8-184. TTT RT TY YY YY YY Prevent An Epidemic Spray or Gargle | of Permanganate oi Potash we : Save - Coal Now Use imposted cheat. nut coke for kitchen ranges. Clean, no smoke, Brn will be safe from Spanish In- fluenza, We have this solution made to the proper strength from water, ; 25c BOTTLE. : | iii phages. ~ sharehold=/ no clinkers, and does not gains! your coal Crawford Foot of Queen 3. = | Eel | | ig

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