Daily British Whig (1850), 5 Sep 1919, p. 5

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TL Pp rar pa a S0) WM RECORDS The Great Reduction in the price of Red Seal Records Does not constitute a 'cut-price sale but a permanent reduction in price. This was accomplished by the sacri fices made by theartists and manu- facturers for the purpose,of placing the World's Greatest Music by the World's Greatest Artists in reach of everyone. Just Look at this : 98201 List terme NOW $3.50 Lucia=>Seftette Caruso, Tetrazzini. Amato, Journet, Jacoby, Bada Rigolétto--Quartet - Caruso, Sembrich, Scotti, Severina Boheme--O soave fanciulla:- Soprano ang Tenor Melba-Caruso Traviata--Dite alla giovane and Baritone Galvany-Ruffo Elegie--Massenet Caruso-Eiman Sing Me To Sleep--=Soprane with Violin Gluck-Zimbalist Trovatore--Miserere Caruso-Alda-Chorus Pagliacci--Finale Paoli, Huguet, Cigada, Pini, Corsi and Cho. l'oreador Song > Ruffo with Chorus Ave Maria---Tenor and Violin Caruso-Elman 96001 95200 22503 --Soprane 89066 89094 89030 89137 Carmen 91865 89065 Victrolas from $34 to $597 (sold on easy pay- ments, if desired). Ask for free copy of our 620-page Musical Encyclopedia, listing over 9000 "His Master's Voice" Records / Hear them at any "His Master's Voice" dealers Manufactured by ' Berliner Gram-o-phone Co., Limited Montreal Jeweler, 158 Princess St. Agent Victor Victrolas. Phone 445 We are always pleased to demonstrate Vietrolas and Victor Records T. F. HARRISON CO., LTD. Mahood Bros. [Agents Victor-Victrolas, 113 Princess St. PURE ICE CREAM SERVE IT FOR LUNCHEONS, DINNERS AND SUPPERS ! i Most modern machinery used in making our Ise Cream the ingredients are the best--nothing but pure cream used. Prompt delivery to all parts of the city. Superior Ice Cream Parlor 204 Princess St. Phone 648 McLaughlin's Old Stand. ty Lt ee Vig Drink © Charm Black Tea Sold in Packages Only * 'GEO. ROBERTSON & SON, Limited A WOMAN'S RESTAURANT For luncheon, a shopping "bite," or dinner, there is no more delightful place tor 4 woman, alone or escorted, than the Grand. A visit will demonstrate how well we cater to the tastes and com- fort of our women patrons. Moderate prices and polite Service are not the least noteworthy characteristics ) - BIBI DDI DIPPED GODS | 4 ust Answer for Crimes alae or Seer eel at ance, asked ondon co y wh higer He might iolation re 1s it that the Crown upprecht of Bavaria will be i He was. the British precht w 1, the most 8 ed in e e Crown here appears to have ill-feeling, and it Ras been that on more thdn one when they el different views o military operat Hindenb fe the judgment of R 1 Is not surprising, since wa minded soldier, 3 sions had to = nan with 1€r 1inmor and vindi id chit will among the ex-rorvalties who mat expected to have the apport show cause 'why the court should not It' is taken for gr 1 denburg, - Ludendorff, Tirg Bethmann von Hollweg will be ed. There can be no doubt t had a certain responsibility conduct of the war, and perh the events leading up to of Belgium. Another ter who is likely the allies is Von { lowed Ven Tirpitsz Marine. He pinned the success of the submarine paign, which was carried out renewed vigor under hls auspi There will also be several subia: commanders summoned to the ba: and among them will certainly be | Von Forstner and Wilhelm Wernher {| both of whom were decorated by the Hohenzollern for some atrocity. Sev i eral of the submarine commanders perhaps most.of them; are-ne-longe | within the jurisdiction of any earthi { court. Commander Max Valentine | Is supposed tq-have commanded th U-becat which k the Lusitanis { tut whether he is living is uncer | tain, Mackensen, the man who did & much to break the heart of Russi: and who conquered Serbia and Ko { mania is also to be extradited. H | will be charged with the monstrou crimes which accompanied the inva sion of Roumaaia in 1918, when 1} country was stripped of the necess ties of life and hundreds of prison. were executed. After the war | was interned in- Hungary with 'h army for attempting to violage th { terms of the armistice. He is no in the hands of the allies, it. is be lieved, and can be produced on' few days' notice. He and Hindenbu: are the only holders of the 'Gra: Cross of the Iron Cross, and it ms be that his age will save him as i may protect Hindenburg and Tirpi from capitdl punishment. Anothe German gencral against whom a lon score has been run up is {0 vo Below, the most Pfam i ing the burning of Ardenne and (| execution of one hundred peopl Gen. Liman von Sanders, in con mand of the Turkish campaign i. Mesopotamia, will be accused of or dering or sanctioning the massacre in Armenia and Syria. Baron Osca: | von der Lancken is: held partly ac countable for the execution of Mise | Cavell and Capt. Fryatt, ] It will be remembered that after the armistice von der Lancken was | appointed with Dr. Reith, who had been prominent in the German occu- pation of Belgium to tonfer with Mr. | Hoover about food snoplies for Ger- | TR rtrd mac tinisin" miino in CATARRHOZONE INAIERR be the Cabinet to be den 4 Capelle; I 2 as Fives Effective Relief in Five Min: utes, and Cures Perfectly |FINE FOR (COUGHS OR COLDS. | ¥ =: -------- ' i | It was their inability to reach the! | real source of catarrh and bronchitis! | that caused the medical profession to! {drop liquid cough medicines and | adopt ""Catarrhozone" instead. This | twondefful Inhaler provides a method = {of breathing intg the lungs certain! rare medicinal vipors which are 6! healing and comfdyting as to entirely { {banish coughs, cdtarrh and throat! {trouble in a very ghort time. | i { The most wondyrful thing about! | catarrhozone is, i | Where the germs t bronchitis or! ieatarrh are hidd Catarrhozons | fan | to his right leg and foot, was per- | 'handicap did not prevent him, how- | In many fields of { 1912, he swam Penarth '0 Newport, a distance of | Tres HiTes | he immediately | service, | fighting branch betause of his phy- | sical incapacity. In {he brooded over his mabllity to go | told the soldiers that he hag a song | From that moment the BONE grew in | this country. | at | at billets on the Western Front, { France, in Flanders, | Africa. i | ture THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG JOver sent back ly Capt office ers yon Doberit at Ruh! Madgeb r $ meyer at Holzminden and Clawusthal. One of the ter was a German- American and was particularly bru tal to British 2ben, rg L War Song Was Composed By Crippled Welshman And Used by Australians LTHOUGH it has been said '| that the "Last of the Trou- has long since van- tofffpne earth, each reincarnation of the t of minstrelsy'in some represen- ed - decade sees a spir f that once interesting tribe, A great. love, a great cause in- the stob h y must put that ort into song War demonstrated this. ngers from their ing quicken Many spontar hearts fo gave sO t But otner 1 ur, even for those five per Walter Wil- 1 ed Welshman, who travelled 13,000 miledMrom un- der the souWthein sun te sing to the Australian and New Zealand soldiers n hospitals and gsmps and on the firing line in France. Skipper Fran- cis' sang is simple, without a teuch >f the poetic frenzy that is expected in an inspiring song But it was taken up by the hard-fighting Anzacs, and dosing rents of great joy or danger it to satisfy their souls. When a transpors was sinking, when the Germans' were cominz on like a storm, when the King » {0 I ew, when victory was at nd, Skipper Francis' song was shouted and piped, whistled and sung, like anthem from. thousands of throats. The song goes thus: "Raliy round ner of And take the foam; a On land or sea, wherevey, you be, Keep your eve on Germany But Britain, Home and Beauty Had no cause to fear 3* Should Auld Acquaintance h® for- got the Banner, the your country. the field with brothers o'er Ban- Nea! No! be" there! be there! No! «No! a will will No! An Au alia Skipper Francis' life history is in- teresting» He was born in Wales in 1886, and, through an accident manently crippled. This 'severe ever, from becom ing an athlete. By vigorous training came to excel ort. In August, stol Channel, from He was Tn Melbourne, Australia, when the war opened, and volunteered for the He was rejected by every Intensely patriotic, to the front. In October of 1914 he composed his gong, writing both words and music. He visitéd Broad- meadows Camp, near Meibourne, and for them. - He sahg his lay, "Aus- tralia Will Be There," and before he left the cadtonment every soldier kew the song and was singing it. popularity, like. "Over There" in It was accépted as the official march song of the Australian Expeditionary Forces in the . same month, and was sung by the troops on 'their farewell march through | Melbourne, December 17, 1914. Never a troopship left Australian shores buat "Australia Will Be There" was sung by both populace'and soldiers. When the transport was torpedoed and sunk om Septem- ber 2, 1913, the Australians sang as | they rowed away from the doomed | vessel; and they were singing the Skipper's' song. WHen the Anzaes captured the' advanced trenches at Gallipoli in one of the. most stirring of campaigns, his scng Hlled the air the charge. It was sung when the Ballarat was torpedoed in the English Channel un April 25, 1917; in Palestine, and | An official report of an action on' the western front gives this episode dealing with the lay: "At the neight of an action on the western froutan Australian subaltern mounted a' parapet with a tin whistle ia his' hand He played 'Australia Will Be There.'! The men cheered as they fed the machine guns, declaring that he-would attract the Huns with \ { bie music, and they would offer bet. ter targets. The subaltern thea pro- ceedéd to play, 'The Watch on the Rhine," upon which the enemy ma- | chine gunners, incensed, | srehtly 5 | seemed to corcentrafe their fire up- on him." i The song was played a§ an over- at svery Brdon theatre when Prime Minister ghe: arrived; the | King and Queen heard it on March - 22, 1914; it was played and sung during ome of the: Liberty Loan campaigns in New York. i a Prescott, Sept, 4.--One of the larg- est fires Prescott has known for some | time took pladg, when the barns eof | S. Bowers, marble cutter: R. G. Free- man, undertaker, and Mrs. GG. E. | Johnston, which is leased by L. Gra- | ham, Nackinan, were destroyed by |. fire. A quiNltity of hay in each of the barns, and a valuable horse be- ie PAGE FIVE e=----0)] mies ---- _ Prices The above prices patterns and fabrics. "kind that make you If you can liiplicaté 0. these clothes elsdtwhere for less than si more -- come * to, back and get your money. ------------------------ o_o --------" SE ---- Southland '7 --_ Coast- to-Coast Vancouver, When . » mnson shop he becomes A Shop Where Customers Repeal a man buys in a Rob- a steady patron. Not only that, but he passes the good word along to others, who in turn enlist, constantly enlarging my ranks of enthus- iastic boosters, There' than mere good - will brings my customers s something more that back. You'll realize what it is, when you sée the saving values | am offering in new Fall Suits and Top Coats. It's true, | keep the selling ex- pense down. What | save in marketing these clothes goes into better merchandise. And I Make It a Point To Fit You There' " s seldom a time when a man walks out of Robinson's because he cannot be fitted. | specialize in out-of-the-ordi- ndry sizes for men, who want good ready-for-service clothes. & cover a Not the feel you " 4 Montreal (2 Stores), Torone Ottawa, Winnipeg, most unusual range of styles, commonplace variety, but the are 'well dressed. A Robinson Raincoat is like a British Battleship -- they both "weather a ete storm." | SUFFERS LOSS OF BARN. | Thought That Thieves May Have | Stolen Grain, . |. Balem, Sept. 2.--On Sunday even- | ing about 10 o'clock, David May Gad | the misfortune to have his barn burn- ed, with the season's crop. Mr. May had just returved from calling on & { near' neighbor, and was about to re- { tire, when he discovered the fire, | which 'soon destroyed the building | and contents. Next morning the neighbors dug among the embers, | but could flad no trace of grain, and {it 1s thought that possibly thieves may have stolen the grain and per- haps dropped a match in some loose chafl. Mr. May had rented the farm from Mrs. Wimperly who resides is Consecon, and the insurance was small. ; Several from here attended the fungral of - Mrs, - Reuben Adams on Surlday. Robert Cannons has his brotapr from England visiting him. n > John Daridson, Arnprior, aked about fifty years, Church street, lies in a serious condition as the resaitof €evere injuries sustained when he wis assaulted by his nephew George Constant. A {d | AY y ALLA t - longi to 8S. Bowers, were lost in { will reach -d destgy them. oh | the ames The vrigin of tha fire is | H Get the large size, lasts months, | unknown, but it is thought that it lis T® to cure you, price $1.00; was caused by spontaneous combus- | ned size, 50¢; prisle or trial tion. The loss is only partiy covered i isize, 25c. AN dealers) Yor igsurance, : : - here, Ea it = ar ; : A NEW PICTURE OF THE PRINCE'S FLAGSHIP, Unusual photograph of the battle-cruiser Renown taken By an officer of the ship, = | -

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