, Ome year, to _ thrifty whether they want to or PAGE FOUR THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, SATURDAY, MARCH 8, 1919, THEY MUST NOT ADVERTISE. Prohibition of this, that and other thing is surely though gr ally taking away from the ordin: citizen the right to think and act fo rimself There is herent in the Anglo-Saxon characte which rebels against these encroach ments on personal liberty. The Qu bec legislattire has just passed laws prohibiting dentists from advertising, | although heaven knows they requir THE BRITISH WHIG 86TH YEAR, someth tradesman. exclusive the another body, to themselves with peculiar safeguards, | and thus pose as a class apart. advertise their services in the ibs dentists, seek like lic press in infra dig. titude, but public opinion and the! trend of the times soon convinced them that they were running con- trary to public opinion. To-day they vie with one another in presenting | their claims for public support. A | Published Daily and Send-Weekly by THE Brrr WHIG PUBLISHING 5 CO., LIMITED, . G. Kiltott .. President Taman A . Editor and Managing-Director. Telephones: Business OMICS .. ... ... w .. «343 Editorial Rooms ., ' . avs see nad 292 | she see ax was powerful, which hides its light un der a bushel soon finds itself giving | place to the more progressivé bank | whidh takes the public into its con- SUBSCRIPTION RATES (Daily Edition) One year, delivered in city One year, If paid in advance .. One year, by mat! to rural offices «$6.00 «$6.00 tes .. «98. (Semi-Weekly "Kdition) paper publicity the peculiar service | mail, efsh .. ... . .3L0 7 ' One year, by A advance ha which it can render to the community 1.50 | which alone enables it 'to servive. The dentists are no less the ser- One year, if not pald in Une year, to! United States SPECIAL REPRESENTATIVE F. W. Thompson, 57 Mail Bldg., Toronto R. Bruce Owen, 133 St. Peter St, Mont. rea PF. F.Northrup, 336 Fifth Ave, New York F.R.Northrup, 1610 Ase'n Bldg., Chicago Letters to the Editor are published only over the actual name of the writer. fore take the public into their confi- | dence, even as the bankers have. It there be among them progressive capable of rendering, why should their organization, or the provincial 4 ' a | legislature, stand in the way? Every | | Attached is printing offices of the best job in /' Canada. form of progress this world has seen has met with opposition, but the op- position was ever short-lived and in- effective. There no reason to doubt that an exception will occur in the case of the dentists. This is a {day in which every cause has to jus- tity itself before the public. Legis- lative enactment cannot "fill the aching void." Neither can the peo- The governor of North Carolina ple be ignored. | Is impatient 'with the governor of ro -------------- | South Carolina when he remarked: ANOTHER SAM HUGHES ouUT- "We haven't much time to spare." BURST. Then they both fell to. The irresponsible Hughes has been at it again, and for his latest and most outrageous outburst there exists not the slightest atom of excuse No be obliged to become | man in his sane, sober senses would descend to make such statements as Sir Sam did in the house the other day. Thoge who heard him are either denouncing him for having meed- lessly harrowed the feelings of thous- ands of relatives of the men who fell in France and Belgium, or are ridiculing him. for the irresponsible Statements he made there. Tt is indeed amusing to listen to a man who never smelt pdwder criticizing the generals who Yived in, and in Some cases died in, the thick of the fighting on the western front. But aparently Sam Hughes is not happy unless he is strutting in the limedight | with some sensational statement. In other words, he is the most persist- The circulation of THE BRITISH Whig is authenticated by the BC A Audit Bureau of Circulations. is If advice could be cashed at the bank the average editor would be the richest man in the world. --Fay- otte Advertiser, With all the taxes that this country will soon have to pay, Can- adians will not. How are the mighty fallen! Prince Joachim, youngest son of the ex- kaiser, has been put in prigsen by the Bavarian socialists, and has been re- fused ball. Long may he stay there. Tirpitz, the developer of sub- marine ruthlessness, is now living on the charity! of 'the German people. He wouldn't. live long on the charity the rest of the world would give him. » ------------------------ - Germans are complaining that the League of Nations is unjust, but that they will have tv obey its commands. A ; publicity as much as any other|V , fo { In an attempt to become | © go 1 many | Ing surround | jority, there should be.no raising of| been advocated on more than one oc- gpm who are using the highway. | press train Thése will, no doubt, view of the matter is rath hen one looks at the Ww pro. 2 viewpoint of the hum | quite | towns peed limit is traffic Too many motor ent 11 enough for in village lents occur every year, and a large been | of could have cars responsible! these the at a number revented had lesser rate of the walk-| large ma-| elling the safety of tray For public, who are in the the limit The pleasure of people | To {travelling in the open country in the] the forefront of the programme of pub-| humble buggy or wagon ig also com-|those who are workingefor the good Bankers not | pletely spoiled by the road-hogs who|of the nation, and for the future de- 80 long ago assumed the same at-|are chafing because they are by law, | velopment of its resources. if not in 'reality, limited to a speed | of twenty miles an hour. Unless in} case of emergency, it is hard to see | why any one should desire to travel | any faster than that speed, for any-| thing higher than that is not com banking institution, no matter how |fortable to the motorist, nor safe for| fo To look at the matter in another! light, it is a recognized fact that ex-| cessive speed will do more than any-| oo | fidence and announces thrangh news- | thing else to tear a roadbed to pieces. | held here, . { in-| road | Maintenance costs are thereby the life of the Therefore, and shortened. creased, when motor-| sts are clamoring for good roads, it| li ¢ . r 6 sumers than exists now, vants of the public, and should there-|it hard to see why they should at the | i same time desire to travel at great-| er. speed, when the roads will suffer | in consequence. Truly the request 7 ct . tc} y barrel of apples, similar sive {of the Ontario Motor League in this| ing a Db ha x members wha desire to tell the peo- | N { that which Prof. Leitch carried out} ple of the special services they ate |'®SPect is an unreasonable one, and one that should not for be considered. a moment EDUCATION FOR DIAN CHILDREN No. 1. education FREE CANA. to the! and more } The value of world is becoming more apparent in these days of world wide unrest and strife. fact that the Bolshevist movement | which has caused disorders and riots | in Europe originated in Rusgia, the] country where education was notori- | ously behind the times, and where the masses of the people were sim- ply an ignorant mob. It has spread with lightning rapidity in the coun- tries where the educational, systems are backward and lethargic and has made little or no progress in coun tries like Britain, the United States and Canada, which have the best edy- citional laws in the world. Eduea- tion is one of the main props of pro- gress. Without educating the peo- ple, reforms cannot be expected. The great prohibition campalgn = which has had so far-reaching. results on this continent could never have been 80 successful had it not been for the educational work carried on by | those in favor of the movement. m| short, lack of education means an ignorant and restless populace, and education means an enlightened, ac- tive and progressive people. The moral of this is that better educational facilities | It is a significant | are necessa ry -- then, 1s that education be) ime movers in this earned | made entirely in the public free, not only the eol- this schools, but also in legiate institite Of urse will be considered visionary and dra with opposition, in tie, and will meet but it is a thing which must come the educational fully life. up in our midst need more than their forefathers: did, and the only way in which they can get it is by making it boy and girl. This is ystem of Canada is| 3 i the needs of -modern The children who are growing meet education far free for every a policy which has casion, and one which should be in (To Be Continued) SELL APPLES UNDER COST, Durham and Northumberland Grow- ers Will Ascertain Cost, Cobourg, March 8.--*1 believe that r years past we have been selling, our apples at less than the cost of | production," 'said Fresident S. WA Staples ay 4be eighth annual conven- tion of the Northumberland-Dur- ham Apple Growers' Association, If consumers understood pro- the facts in regard to cost of ducing not only apples but other foodstuffs, there would, added Mr. €rew of Trenton, be a better 'under- standing between producers and con- M. Macklam of Brighton sug- gested, as a means of bringing about such better understanding an in- vestigation into the cost of produe-| to} in regard to cost of producing al hundred pounds of milk. A resolu-| tion was adopted on motion of C.' R. Lovekin, seconded by E. H. Martyn,! that the department be asked to car-| ry out the investigation suggested | by Mr. Macklam, and that the in-| vestigation be made in Northumber- | land and Dunham | In an address dealing with winter injury of fruit trees, Prof. Caesar advised as means of prevention no cultivation later than July 1, plant- ing orchards only where there is good drainage and a free circulation of 'air, planting hardy varieties, fastening a beard on the south side of young trees to prevent sun scald. Where the bark has been wholly killed, Prof. Caesar advised remov- ing the dead portion and painting the wound. Prof. J. W. Crow said that 50 per cent. of the apple trees of Ontario were either killed last winter or so badly injured they are likely to die. Because of this reduction he de- clared the present was the best time for new planting that has ever oc- curredein the Province. He pro- nounced the Snow one of the very best varieties for general planting; Some of the other varieties wecom- mended were: Wealthy, Melntosh and Duchess, in early varieties. These who bogin by trying to de- ceive others, end by deceiving them- selves, } Ey Trae nna He's One of Many | Satisfied Customers Who Have Found Relief in Dodd's Kidney Pills. f . | Muskoka Man Tells How After Four Months' Illness He Found The BIBBYS Style Headquters: eee ere -------- Bibbys If It's New, It's Here. Cloth don't make a man, but-- They 'advertise what he's making ohimself. : Drop in and we'll show you. i 1919 TheNew Model 1919 The Ace he quality English, neat patterns, fancy chet. Special values, $35.00. Vist seam Overcoats to 'match. Spepl value, $25.00. Shs ready to try on; finished to your orddin a few hours. WORKINGMEN'S SUITS Ged, honest, serviceable tweeds, good pattens, and colorings. Conservative three- butta models. Sizes 34 to 44. Special valug $15.00 and $18.50. YS' SUITS--New 1919 Model Neywaist seam style. Same as men sin cut ahve. Full bloomer pants, sizes 31 to 35. Spcial values, $15.00, $16.50, $18.00. A MI HT II SH SAL. OF MEN'S WOOL SWEATER trmrrsecdreresnen CAFS Extra becial Value .. .. .... .. 3298 Limited i] for the development of our popula- Sut So} wir un Sania Yas tion to the best advantige. The pres- remind one of the signs seen outside ent educational laws of Canada are most garages aroun the SURTLrY: as good as those of most countries, "Free Afr." "but they might be amended in many Right from the start of the war! VaY8 in order to make them more ef- his tongue has been a most unraly fective for the education of the member, and on more than one oc- younger generation, which is going casion it has.got him into trouble. {to be the future ruling clasf of Can- One has only to remember the sense. | 24a. As the law stands at present, ss way in which he reprimanded there 1s a certain amount of discrim- the officers of a certain battalion at, nation in favor of the well-to-do Burriefield Camp in 1915 while uf asses, to She imivantage of the : parade with the men, and the way POOTer ¢lass, is ik not calculated ? in witich he tried to dictate to Kitche.| 10 Sve he best results sy far(304 Sony Be te La ra to ner regarding the Ypres salient, and," the education of the masses of the , heavy "dragging sensation across HARDW to Halg regarding other operations Hoople is Sowerned, Jusauss, in the the Joins. SOMEE. with the Uodhor. BUNT'S in which the Canadians t majority of cases, the cost of amy| * n't bother w e doctor. We \ The big oe vg ant. higher education, and sometimes of dq Dodds Almanac by Riana 1 Phoue 588 : RAR WARS Was that he never sensed the magni-|2Tdinary secondary equeation is suf- Dodd's Kidney Pills. Sh = tude of the campaign and the eondi- ficient to bar the children of the "Before I had taken half a box I|*® . i : tions under which the soldiers were DOOrer classes from receiving an edu- figliting. This error led to his out-| "ation 'which would enable them' to Anything that can put the fear of God into the hearts of the Hun is far from being unjust. 78, 80, 82 Princess Street Remedy For All His Ailments, I P Larchwood, Algoma, Ont., Mar, 7th--( Special) "Dodd's Kidney Pills did me good and I want every-, body to know it." So says Mr. | Cyrus Correll, a well-known farmer living near here. "I was sick for four months," Mr. Correll continued, "My trouble start- ed from a combined cold, and strain. I" Suffered from neuralgia, d had pains in my back. I wal often dizzy. "My sleep was broken and unre- freshing, I was tired and nervous and I had a nasty taste in my mouth in the morning. 1 was depressed freland cannot expeet that tha peace conference will devote much time to its problems. The Sinn Feiners have forefeited the 'respect of the Allied nations who have the major part of the decision in their hands. CANNED VEGETABLES Are Lower in Price This Season TOMATORS BUCKEYE THE PERFECT INCUBATOR---00-120 EWG SIZES We can sell you these as cheap as any mdl order house. You don't have to wait till they are shipped frén the factory, The losses in Canadian forests you can see them before you buy. And wo willshow you how due to fires are causing concern to the commission of conservation. An adequate system of' forest protec tion is the only way of saving mil- lions of dollars' worth of valuable lumber. -------------------- mi The G.W.V.A. in Alberta believe that no returned soldier should be allowdd te walk about unemployed' King St. everybody to know. how good I IH began to feel better. Now I want if { ™ burst in the house on Monday, for it, Fise from that class to one 'of real while aliens are living on the fat of the land. The soldiers' view may be an extreme one, but it is-a sensible one. -------- i The daylight saving plan is be- ing hotly discussed in the United States Congress. . After the splen- did results of last year, one would imagine that ft would be repeated again this year without any need for discussion. a The Hamilton magistrate who hie had been fully aware of the facts he would know that the Canadian casualties were by no means any higher han those of the other Allied combatants. : Let us hope that Sir Sam's speech will be taken at its true value--that of the ramblings and ravings of a disappointed egoist, who, in his own estimation, was the only fit man to be in charge of the Canadians. The reputations of the Canadian generals are too well known and too glorjous to be hurt by his ft-timed outburst, and they certainly have greater lus Ire and laurels to their names than prosperity. In the schools of Canada to-day, the fees received from pupils for education and supplies do not, when put in a lump sum, represent a very large amount of mondy, but to the parents of many of the children, the feel, and that Dodd's Kidney Pills Hi ad it." I Mr. Correll's symptoms are all |i symptoms of kidney trouble. He |i struck right at the root of the trou- | ) ble by treating the kidneys with | Dodd's Kidney Pills. That's why he | got such good results, and got them! i so quick. Dodd's Kidney Pills have a na- individual fees are quite prohibitive. The policy which the Whig wishes to tional reputation as a kidney rem- edy. Ask your neighbors about them, the Sy has the self-created ments while the offenders wero beating) it for the bush. cn -------- atl ml Spring Dyeing Sunset not stain the hands. Tintex used simply in the rins- ing water makes old gar- ments look like the Rit used like new. #\goap while washing ods gives a permavent color, Hat dye, quickly and + easily applied. Soap dyes, washes and dyes in one operation. Does In all e colors and dyes | and FOR Three ORSALE on Pembroke stréet near King; 7 rooms each: stone founda- tion; cellar; W.C. A soap at $1100 each. Brick dwelling, Sydenham street, 8 rooms, hot air fur nace, electricity and gas, front and back stairs. Price, $3900. . k da yw Nelson street, Bric welling, 8 rooms, furnace, lights and gas. Price $8400. TJ. Lockhart, Real Estate & Insurance