Daily British Whig (1850), 21 Oct 1919, p. 5

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EMPIRE | 'The Marrison Studio GROCERY | High Grade Groceries, Fruits and Vegetables, Cooked and Uncookeu Meats, LEWIS ORR 320 King St. Phone 349 License No. 8.27448 recently destroyed by fire, has been rebuilt and equipped with the most up-to-date apparatus. It will be open | for business on SATURDAY, OCTOBER 235th and the continuation of your patron- age will be appreciated. 92 PRINCESS STREET PHONE 1318w. THOMAS COPLEY Telephone 987 Wanting anything done mm wood floors of ail kinds. will receive prompt IS Qacen street. attention. Shep A ANN G. WASHINGTON PREPARED COFFEE made in the cup at the table. All size cans in stock.! Begs to announce that he has resumed his bractice, corner Johnson and Welling- ton Streets, Kingston. Tee. phone 363. Prompt Delivery. D. COUPER Phone 74 TH1.R Princess strat | nem sno rn, 2 BIG BARGAINS 70c. .50c. 25¢. Clark's Pork & Beans 18c. Ferns, paims, funeral desa'gns, foral sprays, wedding bouquets uw ade to order F. J. JOHNSON, Florist. Ss 228. 115 Brock St. 8 Red Rose Tea Phone Bon Marche Grocery ol Cor. King and Earl Streets. License No. 5-2T149 Phone 1544. Kingston Cement Products Factory Makers of Hollow Damp- Proof Cement Blocks, Bricks, Sills, Lintles, and Drain Tile, also Grave Vaults And all kinds of Ornamental Cement work Factory: cor. of Charles Patrick streets. PHONE 730W Mgr., H. F. NORMAN I et er ts tsind Wood's The Great English Remedy. { Tones and invigorates the whole nervous system, makes new Blood in' old. Veins, Cures Nervous Debllity, Mental and Brain Worry, Lespon. Loss of Energy, Palpitation of t Heart, Failing Memory. Price $1 per box, wiz for $8 Due will please, #ix will cure. Bold by all druggists or mailed in plain pkg. on receipt of Ly ice. New pamphlet mailed free. THE WOOL | ~ hagDic os TORONTO, ORY, (Foraery Bladaar. and -------------- | asaaseas== ---- ei { SPLENDID FARM, 135 ACRES ~--TWO MILES FROM CITY-- FOR SALE. APPLY: -- | W.H. GODWIN ic & SON Real Estate & Insurance 89 Brock St, Phone 484 JLKS say they enjoy our F baking. They know that no bread baked is superior to the bread we make, and they know our pastry is quite tasty, They know our buns are the ones that please and tease their appetite and that all the cake we make is just exactly right. ALL SEASONS OF THE YEAR CREAM In Any Quantity GLOVER'S Phones 47 or 780. Drink Charm Black Tea Sold in Packages Only GEO. ROBERTSON & SON, Limited The Value Of The Home The mar who can afford to own a home----and the average man of ' reasonable earning capacity can ~should make It his first concern to solve the problem. He will be aided in that task by studying the real estate offerings closely and investigating those which Impress him favorably. He will thus be serving himself, his family and his city. To every such man, we would say "Get a home to rally around. For the choicest lots, Telephone 703 houses and locations, apply te: J. 0. HUTTON SOFT LUMBER FOR INTERIOR FINISH We select our finishing luriber with a view to its softness, brightness and straight grain, and can recommend it for the the carpem. tery line, Estimates given on nll kinds of repairs and new work; slse hard. All orders Fresh Cut Flowers | {H paying taxes to the Government, now | 'rue, puré-blood Kaffirs who had fled pa. BASSE PA fe THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG "Kingston and Vicinit VETTE eW Name Please, We { maidens fair pleasure of h the Prince of Wales Satu py Happy At Referendum Quarters. 1 at the referendum quarters in uilding last night party of workers § came rolling in. Up For Fall and Winter. st Brock street has a great ment of Ready Made Clothing and overcoats and a splendid ent of Gents Furnishings, his 1 ing department was never assorted at extremely low pri- Oh Fickle Woman! "Twas the woman who did it." re- marked mouth Philosopher MOZAMBIQUE. Portuguese Colony In Continent." The war is over, but the necessity for learning strange sounding names of new lands and peoples is far from over. The spot light which has brought to view such little known peoples as the Czechs, the Croats and the Ukrainians in Europe, now will be turned, in part, on Africa Through the redistribution of col- onial possessions, and the removal of the blight of German domination, Africa bids fair to be the 'boom con- tinent' of the twentieth century New interest is being taken in the | colonies of the erstwhile "Dark Caon- tinent Mozambique is a Portuguese colony to the south of what was Ger- man East Africa, now released from the imperial designs of German Af- rican expansion, and therefore ex- tremely apt to play a more conspicu- ous part in African development. A destription of Mozambique is given by O. W. Barrett, as follows: -- "A country as big as the Atlantic States from Florida to New York, with the capital near the southern boundary and If a dozen smaller towns scattere along the coast; more than 3,000,000 inhabitants, of which only about 'one Per cent. are white; one of the oldest of all Euro- pean possessions and one of the rich- est In agrieditural possibilities, at least, but one of the least known countries in the world. Such is | Mozambique , "Four or five good ports and as many bad ones; five towns and a small but up-to-date capital city, and & generous number of military posts and outposts, a few of which are in the real raw interior; millions of acres of the finest aluvial soil fairly aching to show the farmer what big crops may be grown; waterways like the Zambesi, the Limpopo, and plen- ty of smaller ones to allow cheap handling of products; no deserts, no salt sinks, no large swamps, no moun- talnous wastes, no impenetrable jun- gles; out of some twenty only one or two tribes that object seriously to the "Dark that they realize that the tax collec- | tor is a vital organ of the white tribe, which objects to any one tribe ex- | terminating another in the good old | way; for, wicked as.a bush police- man tries to be, he must needs fall far short of the unrestrained chief's { 'induna.' "The early history of this strange section of East Africa should not be, even if it could be, written. We know the old-time black was as bad as a barbarian can be, and the end: less tale of persistent, widespread, and continuous butchery would not| be good to read. i "The Zulus have had for centuries a superstitious fear of salt water, and so, when Chaka, Dingaan. and { their brother fiends had devastated | practically all the country between! Zululand and Inhambane, wiping out! kraals and. even whole tribes by! | 3cores, they came to a long chain of | lakes (the Lower Inharrime) paral-| lel with the coast, and there they| stopped, thus saving one tribe .of| ver onto the dunes and low, bushy ills between the 'rosary' of brack-: sh lagoons and the Indian Ocean. This tribe, the M"chois, is the purest f not the only unmixed Kaffir tribe ow in existence. "At Quesico we had the good for une to witness a batuque, or ball, asting neéarly three days, at which ibout 3.000 fine specimens, mostly idults, were present. To describe the weird minor music of the marimbas, of huge xylophones. the blood-freez- ng death chants, the thrilling war ongs, the 'expression' dances of oth women and men, and rites and !ivination ceremonies which the vitch doctors were induced to show is would require much space. "The young girls' dance of the 4'chopis tribe requires several years iractice before the difficult poses and hhh dh bb dd to-day. They carried the Temper- ance Act to vietory, and yet they downed Premier Hearst who father- ed the act. Aren't they the ilot? » right kind of banquet | to give the prince--a good feed and] {smoke, and then go home," remark-| ed a citizen "Even the mayor will} {have no chance to work off his super-| {latives in one of those camp meet-! ing kind of orations." i How Will Kingston Fare? i | Kingston tories say that Kingston would have fared better under the Hearst Government than under a new | regime, as Hon. Dr. Ross would have | been there, backed by "Tony" Ran-| kin, to have got the Limestone City! and Queen's University what they | sought. | Strength Will Retum| To Weak People | Using This Treatment You are discouraged. 1 You feel old and worn. | You are sick, but not 'aware of the fact { You can drag yourself around-- | but work is impossible. With your stomach crying out for assistance and the nerves all on edge why not try Ferrozone?--it will surely do vou good. | Ferrozone is a wonderful combin- | ation of vegetable extracts, fortified by excellent tonics for the nerves and | stomach, | When you feel despondent, Ferro- | zone cheers you up. { When langour. and oppression | weigh you down, Ferrozone braces | you up. ! When sleep is impossible Ferro-| zone calms the nerves and gives you rest. For bounding health, good looks, good spirits, nothing eguals Ferro Zone, makes the weak strong and the sick well. Good for men, women | aid children; try Ferrozone, it can! work wonders, as it did for Mrs. | Mary Melong. of Hirbor Bouche, N.| 3., who writes "Ferrozone built me up. "Before using it I scarcely knew what geod health meant. | "I was just as miserable ' and! veak as any woman could be. "Tired from morning to night,| othered by trifles, unceasingly ner- ous. | "The first box of Ferrozone im-| proved my blood, gave me appetite. tn a short time I was like a new per- son. Now I rejoice in abundant good | health." i Try Ferrozome. 1t will make an! unexpected improvement in your | looks, your feeling, your health. | Whether anaemic, nervous or suf- tering from secret disorders--if you | want cure, use Ferrozone. Price 50c.| per box, or six boxes for $2.50, at all! dealers. } | TT maven | contortions can be successruily per-' formed. Ankle rattles are worn by girls. These hollow spheres are made of palm-leaf or grass, if not young gourd fruits, and are partially, filled with large seeds, pebbles, ete. The noise of these ankle rattles is supposed to assist in keeping time in the dance. This is probably a Zulu custom, and even to-day in civilized Durban the ricksha boys frequently wear similar ornaments. "Near Mopea, three days up the Zambesi, we passed through two small native kraals in which the lions had eaten eighteen people in three months previous. It is quite impos- sible to hunt these man-eaters on! account of the tall, rafik grass (four to six feet high), and, since they soon learn that two or three cuffs will make a big hole in the side of' an ordinary hut, the poor native must roost high or die." ---------------- The Word "Selah." The word Selah, which occurs so frequently in the Psalms, 1s usually believed to be a direction to the musicians who chanted the Psalms in the temple. Mattheson, the great musical critics, wrote a book on the subject, in which, after rejecting a number of theories, he came to the conclusion that it is equivalent to the modern "da capo," and is a di- rection that the air or song is to be repeated from the commencement to the part where the word is placed. y r-- The man who' creates brotherly good will and charity is, in a way, doing His mission. Sooner or later uncurbed curious- ity is bound to cause trouble. ! finest work. Let us show you. Allan's Lumber Yard Street . Victoria Phone 1042 Grand Cafe We give special attention to Banquets and Evening Parties. Special private rooms with tables that will seat twenty-five people, Can make accommodation . for about one hundred. Our service is the very best obtainable See the prowrietor, Peter Lee, for further particulars and rates. : a. Above Upers House Open rom § am. to 3 am. Peter Lee. Trop. RESTAU ONLY TABLETS MARKED "BAYER" ARE ASPIRIN Not Aspirin at All without the "Bayer Cross" funny! j 16,000 voters who did | rovski, 'only ou his lastly.' * Two-Thirds Vete Cast. »~thirds of thé voters. register. on the Ontario 1 i Frontenac cas Monday But there ballots were. about not go to polls, the lukewarm Kind who f to do their duty by ) their franchise Tr o---------- Some Women Didn't Like It. Among the many women who tele phoned to the Whig office for refer- endum returgd Monday night were some who were very much grieved | because of the *'dry™ vote "It's just too bad." said one young lady, | who admitted that she liked a "snort | now and then. "Then we won't bel able to get our beer," daughter of merrie England, who! would not be consoled even though the premier who fathered hibition bill was defeated. AA A A RUSSIAN MURDER LEAGUE. Strange Story of Activities In Swed. ish Capital. At the beginning of August police of Stockholm discovered what they believed to be a political "mur- ier league" in the Swedish capital. According to the police, the league was composed of Russian Monarch- sts and its purpose was anti-Bolshe- vik. Four murders were attributed to it. Sixteen persons were arrested, ncluding five women, and fifty oth- ers were under suspicion. The theory held by the Swedish police was that the league intended to end Bolshe- vism and restore the monarchy in Russia by murdering all the Bolshe- viki. A correspondent of the London Morning Post recently returned from Stockholm holds the opposite theory, that the murders were "executions by secret Bolghevik agents of traitors to the Bolshvik cause. He says: "While I was in Stockholm during the years 1917-1919 I had the oppor- tunity of comstantly seeing the mur- dered men -- Ardasheff, Kalve and Engstrom---and their murderer, the so-called 'Cossack colonel,' Mohamed- Bock Hadjetlache. All' these men were constant Kabitues of ihe Stock- holm Grand Cafe Royal, of notorious fame as the meeting place during the war of scores of German, Aus- | trian, Bulgarian, Turkish and Bol- shevist agents, propagandists and other shady personages. During the summer and autumn of 1918 the Grand Hotel Royal and its cafe were crowded with Bolshevist agents and representatives, official amd secret, the Swedish Government creation of a Bolshevist legation at Stockholm. Among the members of this 'legation' was Kalve, one of the | thurdered men, whe arrived from Germany with Lenine, but chose to remain in Sweden. This Kalve called | himself a 'civil engineer,' but, as I learned, he had spent a couple of terms at one of the Belgian secondary technical schools and then became a professional wrestler and 'strong mun' in a traveling circus in Ger- many. the 'Minister,' as his 'tech- | nical attache." Immediately upon his promotion from a circus wrestler to the Bolshevist diplombtie service Kalve changed both his personal ap- | pearance and style of living. From a dirty, unkempt creature in ragged | clothes he became an overdressed | young blood, with fingers covered | with costly rings, gold cigarette case | studded with diamonds and heavily | gold-mounted walking cane. He be- gan to patronize the Grand Hotel | Royal, giving expensive champagne lunches, dinners and suppers and al- | ways accompanied by representatives | of the demi-monde: escorted by his lieutenant, a Swede named Engstrom (also reported mur- ! dered). | "When Vorovski returned from his visit to Berlin in the summer of 1918 a strange thing happened. i Kalve, who had been a fanatical sup- | porter of the Soviet system of govern- | dépn Bolshvism, saying that now he | had seen it from the inside he was disillusioned; that he had come to | the conclusion that all Bolsheviks | were scoundrels, and that he had 're- signed' from the Bolshevist service, His late colleagues of the Bolshevist 'Legation' gave another version of the story. According to them, Vo- orvski, on his return from Germany, alleged that his two chief lieuten- ants, Kalve and Zimmermann, had in his absence helped themselves to con~ siderable sams of Swedish crowns from the legation funds. "A couple of months later I learn~ ed that Kalve had offered his ser : vices to the Swedish police and was furnishing very serious evidence on the secret activities of Vorovski and the Bolshevist organization iz Swe | den. The result of this evidence was | that the Swedish Government severed | dipl tie relations with Bolshevist | Russia and 'invited' Vorovsk! and his | stall to leave Sweden, which they did | last February. On applying for a safe | conduct for himself and his staff Vo- } rovski insisted on including Kalve's | Dame in the list (although Kalve had | 'resigned' several months before), i and on being asked why he was 50 | anxious to.get a safe conduct for a | man who had robbed him, answered: | 'I want to get that scoundrel into | Russia; then we can hang him.' But the Swedish authorities refused to in- clude Kalve in the list and he re | mained behind." A Slow Process. Mrs. Brown was at the back of the | church waiting to have her baby christened.: Baby was getting rest- | less, 50 she beckoned the verger. | "Is the sermom nearly finished 7 | she whispered. Ee i "No, mum," replied the verger, "another half-hour of it yet. He's: "But," said Mrs. Brown, "will it take him half an hour to get through | his 'lastly' ™ i "No, mum," was the demure reply, | "but there's the 'one more word and | I'm dome,' and the 'finally,' and the | 'in conclusion' to come yet. Don't be | impatient." ! ------------ i the | or | Many who think they have right of way are nothing more less tan a tressp daowdarodadoradar | lass than a lresgpasser. 5 4 PAGE FIVE NEW YORK FRUIT STORE | CHOICE CALIFO RNIA FRUIT BART T'EaCE PLUMS .... ORANGES BANANAS Goods delivered to 'all parts of the 314 Princess St. Phone 1405 remarked al] the pro-|| tA. pa it i --~---- 1 BRIGHTEN YOUR HOME WITH FERNS We have just received a shipment of Bostons, Roosey ells Elegantissimas and Table Ferns. "We Strive to Serve" A. D. HOLTO FLORIST. S 280 PRINCESS STREET. PHONE 661. RESIDENCE, 2036w. the | STEAMER BRITANNIC EVERY WEEK BETWEEN MONTREAL AND KINGSTON; AL- WAYS ON TIME. SHIP YOUR-FREIGHT BY THIS LIABLE ROUTE RE- TELEPHONE 2193 FOR INFORMATION. having | | semi-officially récognised the Bolshe- vist Government and authorized the | Kalve was appointed by Vo- | He was always | id suddenly began openly to con- | i Kingston---Cape Vincent Ferry | BY S. 8S. Leave Kingston 6.30 am. Returning at 11.40 a.m. 8.30 pm § Sound trip tickets $1.25, with w $0c: rebate on FELUFA FIP, Bave Ink & 10vely outing for 75 cents. TICKets good to return on date of issue only Bug connections at Cape Vincent from morning boat, glving nearly ¢ hours in Watertown and returning to ¢onnect with steamer leaving for Kingston. For information, phone 2 Automoblies carried sma and 1 p.m. x leaves Cape Vincent at 9.40 a.m reaching Kingston Leave Cape Vincent 4.30 p.m, reaching Kingston at 5, Rockport Nav, Co, Ltd. $3.00. large $4.00. Space reserved ------------ er. i enn ae PURE ICE CREAM SERVE IT FOR LUNCHEONS, DINNERS AND SUPPERS Most modern machinery used in making our Ice 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. a Phone 648 McLaughlin's Old Stand" a green HYDRO GAVE 180,000 PEOPLE CHEAPER ELECTRICITY HYPro electricity saves the people of Ontario millions of yearly. 3 One hundred and sixty-six municipaliti vided with Hydro current, pay less for electricity - than they did before Hydro Power supplied them. | And Hydro current cost them less now than it * did during the first year that they used it. The Hydro Electric Commission of Ontariois con- stantly extending this service for the benefit of the The Commission is interested in doing whateveritcan to make thecurrent used of great. est value. As a result of rigid tests in its own" laboratories the Commission recommends the use of HYDRO Quality Lamps for home lighting. pro- a ---- A ------------- ---------------- = -- OF ONTARIO FOR SALE BY =. Civic Utilities, Hydro pesmi nn

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