PAGE SIX FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1919, THE BRITISH WHIG! THE FAURE WITH YOUTH. T S6TH YEAR The great failure of the mpdern city jo its failure with i jt cularly with maséuline yo {all its much exploited "fact female Sex is much more stal { the male, and much les y tp de- | velop anti-social tenden n & bed LORD SELKIRK | environment. But an appalling num-| When November 14, 1803, dawned it { ber of adolescent boys and g men West ota ra to the great usknows {said he had been in Burma nearly { "80 wrong" in our cities, with de- waa to ia 22s N i its develop. | Mie years as a chaplain at $65 per | = 3 themaale , Play a great role in its P| month. On returning to England { plorable consequences to themselves | ment in the years to come. He was a SouItEen. Yeats ton aE souets Sane | | and to society. dreamer, 80 many thought them, but $350. He held Yarious curacies at Hardly a day passes without some' 100 Selkisie, the intrepid pioncer, The | StiPends of $600 to $500 per year, | serious crime being laid to has uae best and bravest blood of Scotland ran Sventualiy becoming vicar of Rubber- i 3 years or ©|in his veins-and as for fexr he did not After getting furniture on the in- | { 4 {reports refer to holdups, robberies know the meaning of the word. That stallment plan he resorted to money } {and murders. No doubt some of these Sharaetatistic stood him in good stead} jonders and also lost money on & ; " ! Hnotiv . FEATS come. Fouls gob dioghg am In 1802 he wrote the British agthor- | > jities asking permission to establish a | that ¥ yp 2 THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG -- CanadaEast and West Dominion Happenings of Other Days. BIBBY'S STYLE HEADQUARTERS Kingston's One Price Clothing Store ERENERERERZER mw AN ENGLISH VICAR IN NKRUPTCY COURT Evidence That Shows Condi tions to Which the Clergy, Are Reduced. | London, Nov. 1.--The Rev. Joseph | Baldwin Meredith of Rubberholme | { has been forced into bankruptcy. He bh, par- For ,' the | le than | i | HATS HATS iL) Palin 8 | a! hy i J age Complete displays of Fall Styles are ready. We cordially invite you to stop house purchaged by installments, In | five years he had made himself liable comparativelr rare variety of colon erica: the only response evil doer is ridiculous. In all gro- was a statement that the Home Gov- for $2,600 in inte¥®st. He had four | children living away from home. His -| bability, moet of them, in' the be- ernment did not favor such a plan. But ! wife had been out sick nursing, and 'ubilabed Dally aud Scmi-Weekly by was now a waitress in London. To | IN Br I 7 ¥ HE BRITISH WHIG PUBLISHING CO. LIMITED ginning, are just ordinary boys; per- haps a little lazier and more conceit- hiaaitor aud |od than the average of their! fellows, and a little less careful of the rights of others. That is the modest begin- 2 (ving of a growth which, Under mod- ern city conditions, develops into a Jungle of juvenile crime. Why ? i, 6G. Elliot Leman A. Guild .45 . 6. © Ma TELEPHONES: Business Office . cditorial RoomS .. veneer Job Office ....... a SUBSCRIPTION RATES {Daily tion) One year, delive in of One year, if pald in advance .... s90 Ona year, by mail to rural offices '90 One year to United States . x Semi- Weekly BE { J One year, by mail, cash «+: LO One year, if not Le One year, to Uniled s v. $1 Six and three Wonths pro rata. Feces mire os OUT-OF-TOWN -REPRES) y R. Bruce Owen, £2 St. John St, Montreal ¥. M Thomps "01 Lumsden Bldg Torofito x FR Northrup, 315 Fifth Aye. New York ¥.R. Northrup, 1510 Ass'n Bldg, Chicaso Si ---------------------------------- Letters to the Editor are published y over the uctual name of ! ter. i A WESTERN BOOM EXPECTED. { There are quite a number of peo- ple in Kingston ane the surrounding district who bave money invested {in the west, und particularly in real estate. An announcement made the other day by Lieut-Coy. J Leslie | Kincaid, who has just returned to New York, after a tour of investiga- | ton in the west, should prove inter- esting and encouraging to such peo- ple. The freedom of Canada from extensive troubles has assisted to a { great extent in creating confidence in the future of the country, and the EN Attached is one of the best Job printing offices in Canada. The cireulatton of THE BRITISH WHIG is authenticated by the ABC Kincaid's statement is as follows: Andit Bureau of Circulations. "There is no question but that { Bress than the United States in the | after-war adjustment. The western | provinces are using 'business better {than usual' as their motto. Regina, price of burn They have raised: the stoves because the cosl . they costs more.--Toledo Blade. In Toronto a mingster's Wife oc- cupied her husband's pulpit and de- livered a splendid address. And why not? Haven't the"adise always had a reputation or being good talkers. {with great strides, | of building materials Las not acted as la bar to construction. New buildings are shooting up all slong the line of "We must destr@igj* says the New York Soviet, "all Beld-fences = and boundaries." JRuliran they escape the age-old imprecation: 'Cursed be he that removeth his neighbor's land- mark?" | through a repetition of their early | growth. Thousands or returned sol- | dtors are turning farmers and seek- ing the new wheat belt." This report pn conditions in West. [ern Canada, made by an expert, | makes good reading, and will be | hailed with much satisfaction by ail those who have interests in that part of the Dominion, If the Prince of Wales had called at the House of Commons on the evening previous to his visit there, he might Have thought he bad struck another war, for he would have seen the Currie-Cowan battle. .. FOR THE COMMON GOOD. The world carried its war burden by co-operation, Why not carry its peace burdems the-same way? The five years beginning with August 4th, 1914, revealed 8 depths of horror and new heights of hope. They proved to the hilt that all previous estimates of human ca- pacity to achieve and endure had been immeasurably below the truth. Why not utilize that discovery to en- rich human life, as well as to destroy it? War is horrible, fiendish, destruét- ive beyond belief. Almost its only redeeming feature is that it takes a man out of himself, and bids him serve, not his own ends, but those of the community. Why not let him serve the community din time of peace? Why not organize for this . peace service at home as we organiz- 'The veteran's municipal platform |ed for military service in France and is meeting with the epproval of a | Flanders? great many citizens, It seems as if Carleton Parker, one of the wisest there is & genuine d on the part | social students the United States of the citizéna¥io¥ K4¢a ome dead- | ever produced and one whose early wood cleared ont of the council and | death' was a loss to the world, re- some new biood introduced. corded his belief that a great deal of aiid what we vaguely eall "unrest" is a result of the unsatistied communal instinct, which wants to render com- unity service, but is not permitted to do so, save at a prohibitive cost. Other investigators, following in his steps, have confirmed his views and are seeking to put them into opera- tion. Fk or i In. epite of the Soomy plerares Loning and PrOERy ape ub against painted of conditions in Great Brit. a a The provincial police are now em- powered to seize all pistols and other dangerous weapons in the possession of taoreigners, and will proceed at onge to do so. The need of such ac- tion has long been apparent. It is claimed that ninety per cent. of the successful business and pro- fessional men of Canade are products of the farms. In that case there is 800d reason to hope for a success. ful administration from the farmers' party. Fr i per The latest distinguished guest to reach Canada is Admirsl Lord Jel Mooe. He deserves a fine welcome from this country, for only the effic- fency of the navy under his rule made it possible for. the Canadian Corps to reach France, One of the first bills the new Farmers' government will be called upon to pay is that arising out of the late election and referendum. It will amount to about §1,260,000. But it was worth something to get a new set of men at Toronto. LL The proposal of the Premier of Ontario to' make the Farmers' party 2 peoples' party will be pted after his government has shown that 3 before it, 'ain, it Is announced that in October | It 1% Russia, but look British exports increased by over TH NSIS Sas $36,000,000 and imports by wearly Pinched Into Propriety. Hanes. Theretly ngt, wnuch When a woman is unable sh erowd her foot into a small shoe she is an advocate of sensible footwear, v moe ------ ~ (London Press) d ; : selling at a discount. Canadian 'the O.T.A. That does not mean, | sell at a premimm. They'rs a goo Bowever, that mone of them indulge | buy and good patriotism, ; spot on earth. It is good-will that is lacking, not good ideas. ---------------- (London Advertiser) Ww would be a good time fo rid of some of the nonsen- ure that surrounds the of the Legisia- { report given is a promising one. Col. | {Canada has made far greater pro- | { Winnipeg and Calgary are growing | The high cost | the Canadian Pacific, and the larger | | cities. look Mke boom towns going | i undaunted he began to prepare for the {time when he could come to America {In 1808 he came to Montreal where he {was recieved with great honors and {entertained lavishly at the Club of the iday. The Beaver Club membership was composed almost entirely of fur trade officers who knew the West. The { West called him and after tarrving a time at the Grand River he answered {the call of the wild. Then his real work and the establishment of colonies {on the Red River and fur stations even farther west. A colony at York Factory was one part of his work. In those days the Hudson's Bay Company was the power in the wilds. It was but natural that the young Lord should come into conflict with it. There weye charges and counter charges and wild and troublesome days. But he continued his work with the result that strong sities stand now where he established colonies. He died in the south of France, where he had gone to seek renewed health, in 1820. It is only in recent years, however, that the full value of his pioneer work has been appreciated. furnjture, and the vicarage was praec- tically bare of furniture. mated deficiency was $4,800. The official receiver at the con- | nominations do not see that their | clergy are better paid, if Christianity does not compel! them to do it, then | humanity ought. We should not have people of education faced with | such a horrible alt&rnative.' i Eighty men of the American army and pavy and seven Red Cross npur- | ses were decorated at Washington by the Prince of Wales on Thursday. At Spokane, Wash., rour mem- | bers of the LW. W, were arrested on | Thursday, < | I~ HOOD"S PILLS: Constip: raly vegara hia Rest family rather Rippling Rhymes UNHAPPY. Unless there's a big purse in sight it doesn't pay to start a fight. I will from this land depart, with my gun and | carpet bag, when its customs break my heart, when bore that has made me raw and sore, 1 will seek | When I know some other land-that has got this coun- | try skinned, be it on the Asian strand, or some island | of the Ind, T will take the quickest boat. with my | corkscrew and my goat, for that paradise remote, and | this country may be tinned. But while I am dwelling | here, hanging out my minstrel sign, it seems pretty > plain and clear that I have no"right to whine; if I'm sore on Uncle 8am, and would give his flag a slam, I should move to Rotterdam, for a rotter's soul is mine. If the time should ever come when this country seems a frost, all its bulwarks on the bum, and its laws L) not worth the cost, I will sail away, away, to .olq nr 5 Russia, or Cathay, where I'll spend my little day by Some tinhorn tyrants bossed. But while its hallowed loam, its palladi e spangled cows come home; I will hand out sturdy blows to its critics and ity foes, and when I Tun out of prose I'll embalm it in & pome, --WALT MASON. The Wn. Davies Co, Ltd. SUECIAL SALE OF BEEF, BUTTER, BACON | AND CANNED GOODS FOR SATURDAY Choice Shoulder Roasts .........."... 20c. Ib. Boneless Rolled Pot Roasts ,.......... .23c. Ib. keep the pot bofling he had sold his | The esti- | clusion of his examination said: "If | the Established Church and other de- they make my spirit sag: when our government's a | some other shore, where 1'll stand and chew the rag. | Western Rump Roasts ......... .. .23¢c. Ib. Boneless Rolled Stewing Beef ...... . 18c. Ib.| Boling Beef (Briskets) . .. .....14c. and 16¢. Ib. | Western RibRoasts . ................ 28 Ib. Flanks,Beef ............. 0". "15h Finest Smoked Ro Bacon, sliced . . . .. .36¢. Ib. Davies' Wiltshire Ham, sliced .. .52¢. 1b. Always buy Davies' Wiltshire Back and Breakfas Bacon--sweet as a nut and mild cured. 500 lbs. Whey Butter coves Vo B52 Ihe 1000 ps Poia® «vv fn sans Fresh Cooked Pork Liver PELE eRe en aa Tripe ...... "wen. eee in ea ta ree Ae ewe ayy kati : A.D. HOLTON A in for a "look, Sir" wherever you have time. No formalities, just a friendly show- ing of what's what for Fall. We've ar ranged displays throughout the store that will interest you, and every one of us will be glad to show you and tell you about the new ideas for Fall. &' --Ask to see Bibbys $35.00 Young Men's Suits -- the Rand. --The Haig, $35.00. --The Bud, $37.50. ~The D'orsay, $42.50. --The Raverhall, $45.00. MEN'S GLOVES You'll say we've done well to get such an as- sortment, ~--Motor Gloves ~--Driving Cloves --Dress Gloves Dents, Fawnes, Perrin --Ask to see Bibbys Young Men's Overcoats--the Bel. grade, $25.00. --The Emerson, $30.00. --The Heath, $32.50. --The Admiral, $35.00. ~The Primrose, $37.50. A Great Combination called See Union Suits Underwear. Fine Merinos, $2.00 per suit* Natural 'Wool, $4.00, $4.50, $5.00 per suit. Usually "Unions." NEW TWEED HATS : Take a peep at our new Fall - ~ in Real Be auties. Tweed Hats at $3.50. + ¥ SHOES py BIBBY'S SHOES KINGSTON'S ONE PRICE CLOTHING STORE 7880-82-81 PRIN CESS STREET SnenEaEEEERE EN ENNENNECNNEERNNNENRAR LOWE BROS. ALUMINUM PAINT 25¢., 45¢., 80c. sizes. STOVE PIPE ENAMEL Price $2 Phone 1055W. or 1 fre-- Re ---- { ] Ee 9,000 16.000 17977. There 8 } fishness badk of while, = Never wreand, / A friendship worth crack & joke on delicate Py od :