Daily British Whig (1850), 25 Sep 1919, p. 4

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ho rt , PAGE FO THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER, 25, 1919 "or UR psn: ot. THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG "WANTED: A WORLD LEADER : Old People : he International Sunday School Lesson For Soptombie 28th Is "Review: Jesus uur Saviour and King. --matt. 21: 1-9, 15, 16. By William T. Ellis. Some of us may live to sé¢ the day when &s a result of this great measure (Conled. eration) a great and powerful peopie may have boundless forests all around us shall have lominant time, To om the he his people grown up on these lands--when given way to smiling fields and thriving towns--and when one united Govern. ment, under the British Flag shall extend Because it contains the very elements needed to replace weakness with strength --cre- ates an appetite and refresh- ing sleep. Money returned if it fails Get Vinolatleading drugstores CHESTER KENT & CO, WINDSOR, ONT, THE ARTHUR SALES CO. TORONTO. WOK & & D08PACGIL. The Great 0 Rey ry, Despo sation ¢ iin} i i Yet e. THE WOOL QROKTD, 0 { Fogmarly Wis . EMPIRE GROCERY High Grade Groceries, Fruits and Vegetables, Cooked aud . Uncooked Meats.\ LEWIS ORR 820 King St. Phone. 349 License No. 8.27445 a . 5 ' * -- Coughs and Colds Mean Restless Nights g which sap the vitality. { Danger lurks in every hour a cold is allowed fo ruil. Assist nature to bring your children quickly back to health and strength and avoid serious Cemplications by the prompt use of Gray's Syrup -- over 60 years .n use. Always buy the Large Size GRAYS SYRUP Biblia ATU CLARK'S Spaghetti Tomato Sauce (Cheese Great. Ready to serve. Just heat and eat. W. CLARK, LIMITED, MONTREAL. 4 HE oN f the 1 per box, six Paoli b "Tee ' - His anger flames at vested wrong; S-CTroOsg i incertainty tween - the Fld' ria'§ old 5 do not star i falter s | that one, or i; the hero for Only the fool imanity puz tands now at a cro Our time is lik ule 'to-day are than the Strange impulses decision ani f vements One of omas Curtis Clark, over | poets, the T} "Around ney The rejoices. The people's God has people's plea; It is the dawn, the dawn of liber When we come to examine qualities essential to such > we find that no other p han the Hero and { whom we have been studying f | past three months. | | Marks of the Great Leader. Check up the characte Christ, and at once the) as the essentials of the Worle for the gresent--hour.-Let me indicat ristics . ta few, appealing ever to the Teader's , Judgement 'for confirmation: i » new World-Leader must be one whose' judgement is not swayed by a sense of expediency. The calamity o | the Paris Conference was that other | | considerations righteousness {entered in as deci factors. Com- | promise, concession, fear, pride | revenge, self-aggrandizement all went ito make up the conclusions which {have left the world dissatisfied and! i rebellious. Statesmen have arisen from their seats at the Peace Table {and gone home to face indignant! | pations, whose moral convictions | {were higher than those of their | { leaders. It now seems as if China and | | Korea and Egypt, to cite only thred | conspicuous instances, will ultimately secure from the public opinion of, J the justice denied them at| __| Paris, Perhaps statesmanship will yet; 1éarn, in the bitter school of exper- { ience, that what is not morally right {cannot be politically expedient. When | leaders make trice ~ with their con- | sciences they automatically abdicate their real leadership, though not necessarily their position. 3 Ly e Sél&p | wound, hur € ved emptying love has 3 The Torch-Spirits of History Two other qualities the 8 enkin "Magnetism" rea Along with "Men w of such a pe pe orth fala follo | sweetest . His nam arfare Protecting Birds. Co-operating Domin aunthorit t acting ur power Birds Protection. Act, 1918, passed regulations providing for protection of birds generally province. The regulations make it an illegal act to "shoot, destroy, catch, net, snare, drug, or otherwise kill, or attempt to--" any native wild birds other than goshawks, sharp-shinned hawks, great horned owls, crows, cow birds, blackbirds and house sparrows. This will not cover, -how- ever, the SHUGTTHE TH Season of game birds specifically provided for in the Game and Fisheries Act, por does it apply to ¢age or domesticated birds or poultry . ' The regulations provide that where any of the birds protected become with » Ontario ( the n in the thei an | an ideal leader 1 1 verninent has ! in the | poison, | What do we find. when we apply seriously injurious to the agricul-| | this test of integrity to Jesus? He «imply scored expediency. None of the parties of his day could adopt him, | because he was "impossible": tural or other interests of any come munity the Minister may issue per- mits to kill them. The possession he did of any protected birds is made an{ . it iw ry 8 ry not know how to compromise. His Offence, and it is equally an offence | clear-cut utterances sometimes alien- vated his own followers; 'as they did also the great and powerful of his time. "Trimming" was simply out of the question for him. He never step- | ped aside from his plain path for self's | sake, even when he knew that path led | to a cross. All who trusted him wholly { found him wholly true. i | By the Soldiers' Test. War taught millions of men that | the supreme quality in character is i courage. Among the soldiers no other virtue counted at all, if this were lacking. We are applying the same test now in political life. The world { will follow no timorous, half-hearted, | "safety-first" leaders. Only one gifted {with a splendid spirit of self- {abandonment can command the hearts | {of men to-day. The single word, "cow- | {ard,"" would brand into oblivion any! { man who sought to lead his fellows: | No hero of romance ever rode! | more valiantly into tHe face of em- | battled wrong than the Strong Son of | God. As a study in heroism, there is! no other character so fruitful as, Jesus. Natyre's storms, mob perils, | ecclesiasticiil jealousy, officialdom's ! deadly enmity, all left him serene! and unafrald. By battle-test, Jesus {rings true. Sings the poet already | quoted: | "We serve no weak and timid Christ, | ! We would not heed a futile Lord The Man we follow unto death i Was not afraid of rod or sword. f «1 . 4 "He asked mo pillow for His head, He sought no luxury of ease; { The tides that swept His daring soul | Were dauntless as the mighty seas. | { "A soldier\of the truth was He; He challenged kings to fateful war, i And sounded clear his battle-song." Politicians Who Profiteer i That shrowest of books, the New i Testament, makes it clear that the { especial temptation of office-holding is convetousness. How unerringly the public has laid its fingers upon this weak spot in the conduct of the new Russian leaders. We have an Ameri- can word, "Grafter," for the politician who profiteers. Lloyd Geo! never stood higher in Great Britain's estimation than when he' refused te { take any decoration or gift for him- { self, as a reward for his war work Great leaders ean { if animated by love of money. i Recently, I met an oriental official | whose name has figured frequently ! in the cablegrams; and whose future | | plisce is problematical. I quickly learn- Lad that he is manacled with. chains of . never become suth | to take or destroy the nests or CEES of such birds -- a bitter pill for youthful birds'-égg collectors. Ex- ception, however, is made in thé case of ornithologists, biologists, or stu- dents of biology, wha may, under conditions, secure a permit to collect birds or eggs. Prosecutions will be made under the Game and Fisheries Act. DICTATES OF FASHION Tricolette is betier liked than ever. Taffeta is used for the newest coats, Voile lini are for coats. Once again elaborate jewels are In favor. Side panels are a feature in skirt trimmings. : Coat linings are bright in color and rich in material. suggested Most suit coats show the normal | shoulder and armhole, Blouses are rather elaborate, usually match the suit. but | Sometimes blue gabardine of two | shades is used in a suit. Navy blue and tan still hold the | center of fashion's stage. There are buttons, buttons every- 'where assuming all duties of ornamen- tation. Before Judge Deroche, Belleville, | W. Humphrey was tried and conviet- | ed on a charge of assaylting C. W Bennett. A suspended sentence of ane year was imposed YOU CAN USE THE CLASSIFIED in reaching that next émployer of yours, Armstrong's departmental store, Lindsay, was burglarized Sunday night and several hundred dollars' warth of jewellery and clothing was stolen. : "KIDNEY *% The oil, too, iz spoken of as bein: from shore to shore --George commerci Robert Jaffr and the better In this, and to the up-buil The Globe i paper. Thro long career i sessed strong, its policy of the people. The "Big policies. -As-the principal stoek- holder of T Robert Jaffray showered his care and upon the paper--building up its departm them greater scope, being constantly in its editors on trong (Ourageous, Uprigh upright men to carry on advocacy of the rights of i Women's Department have never influenced its decisions--nor gained the slightest control over its Brown. bert J HE memory of Robert Jaffray is sti}l green. ing George Brown, his personality dominated * The Globe. From 1888 to 1914 his presidency of The Globe emphasized its leadership in Canadian journalism, .s: and laid broad and deep the foundation of The Globe's al success. ay's devotion to Liberalism was conditional on that party's devotion to policies for the development of Canada ment of Canadian life, in his generous attention ding of The Globe's news gathering organization, Robert Jaffray carried on the task the founder set for himself in 1844, » s not, and never will be, a party or political organ. Itisa Great Family News- ughout its t has pos- courageous, | Every Exclusive C Editorial Pa unswerving Market Rep Interests" Farm and C Industrial S Homema Articles he Globe, attention : a and "Cartoons énts, giving touch with all¥matters relating to The Globe's policy on political and general questions. hen death called Robert Jaffray, on Dec. 15th, 1914, he left The Globe bigger and better for what he had done to further George Brown's ideal. To-day its President, Mr. W.G. Jaffray, and The Globe directors and staff, are carrying on its affairs with a view to in- | pecial Features Financial News Sport Section Once a Week Young People's Page rs' Section Religious Editorials and" Life and Letters 4, Peter McArthur's "Letters" pear several times a week. Rs? ay / + lollow- 'creasing its wide circle of influence-- giving 1t more and more a place in every Canadian home. 3 The Globe is free to speak the thing it believes without consideration of any in- terest in finance or politics, other than the interest of the Canadian people. The actual ownership of an important semi-public institution such as The Globe necessarily is d matter of public interest and the question frequent- ly is asked: "Who owns 'The Globe"? Mr. W. G. Jaffray, as' President of The Globe Printing Company, in the 75th Anniversary Number, March 5th, 1919, said :-- } "It is my conviction, as pub- lisher of The Globe, that I should hold aloof from any financial investments the ad- vancement of which possibly might conflict with the public interest. -- As chief -owner-of The Globe, it has been urged upon me to state in the first place, that the control of the capital stock: of The Globe is in the hands of myself as the largest shareholder; and' that the remaining shares ne- cessary to constitute the ma- jority holding are held by other members of the family of the late Senator Robert Jaffray; in the second place, that my holding of stocks other than Globe stock is lim- ited to a very few shares of 'small value in two or three privately owned companies, which shares have been and still are for sale at the first reasonable market. This statement should convince readers of The Globe that there are no financial relationships _to influence 'its di. rection and its policies." + yr ? Day ables ge orts ountry Life ection in Words" ap- The Globe can give no greater guarantee of its integrity than this, not that it doubts \its readers' belief in its sincerity, but its pub- lishers wish to impress upon all readers and prospective readers that their sole ambition is to produce a newspaper in keeping with the wishes of its founder, and thereb every Canadian hgme. y continue to deserve a place in The Globe Canada's National Newspaper "ORDER FROM YOUR NEWSDEALER OR DIRECT FROM THE PUBLISHERS. o rm Prolitic Breed of rish, Everybody seems fed up with re- striction, and the last straw seemed to have been reached when the fiat went forth that our gas was to be rationed. . But such a decree would have few terrors for the inhabitants of Brit- ish Columbia, who possess a prolific breed of fish, which not only supplies them generously with food, but saves them the cost of electric light, gas, and candles, It is a species of smelt, und whey dried you either wat him or light him. The fish is full of oil, and can easily be adapted io any form of candle-stick. The dried fish is stuck tail uppermost in the receptacie, and when a light is applied it burns with a power which puts am ordinary dip in the shade. Washing Won't Rid © Head of Dandruff The only sure way to get rid of dandruff is to dissolve it, then you destroy it entirely. To do this, get about four ounces of ordinary liquid arvon; apply it at night when re- tiring. use enough to moisten the scalp and rub it in gently with the finger tips. Do this tonight, and by morning, most if not all, of your dandruff will | be gone, and three or four more ap- | plications' will completely dissolve and entirely destroy every single sign and trace of it, no matter how much dandruff you may have. : You will find ,too, that all itching and digging of the scalp will stop at hb rs efficacious as cod-liver oil, it Is indnitely more palatable whik YOU CAN MAKE dlassified adver. tising PAY i you have any task to Rive ta it Nook and feel a' hundred times bet once, and your hair will be finfly, instrous. glossy, silky and soft. end | ter, You can get liguld arvon at any! drug siore. It is inexpensive and | alls to do We work. ; i: nn i Private wires-- New Montreal, Toronto. Ld | STOCKS--GRAIN-- COTTON BONGARD, RYERSON & CO. 22° Bagot St Phone 1798. X . a a a a pt emt sn At Malone, N. Y., custom house of § tion recentl which was seized al Moore's Junsc-! in foam Cs ~All classes of high yield investments -- Corporation, Government and Municipal. = York, Chicago, *. J. Bongard, Manager Ja tht lord ficials sold at auction a touring car! of opium which was being smuggled i Lanada. ws :

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