Daily British Whig (1850), 1 Oct 1920, p. 9

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OOTORER 1, 1920, THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG. For Your Husband "My wife always buys me Deacon Shirts," said a farmer the other 4 They are both well satisfied. The farmer is sure of a good fit, with plenty of room for arm freedom. The wife is proud of the neat ap- pearance and the freedom from mending and patching, and the eternal sewing on of buttons. wear is there. Ask your dealer. Deacon Shirt Company BELLEVILLE, CANADA 7 3 or Asthmes 275 Hay Fevers { ernment Boar ONE REQUIRES A REM SIE, AT00s, A neweoy moar R J.D. KELLOGG Help Your Digestion When acid-distressed, relieve the indigestion with Ki1-MoIDS Dissolve easily on tongue--as Pleasant to take as candy. Keep Jour stoma: sweet, try Ki-meolds MADE BY 500TT & BOWNE MAKERS OF SCOTT'S EMULSION course, Pride in their a pouting, their work, or And that's healthy. But the sort of that sneers at an Ing watch because it's low priced is the pride that leads to extravagance and waste, Tporias A. dion ae too roud to carry a Maple Leaf IO Plenty of other men whose foot prints are on the sands of time keep time with an Ingersoll. © As a matter of fact an Inger- soll is a watch to be proud of. If you had a servant or an em- ployee who gave the sort of ac- curate, trustworthy, faithful service in all weathers and con- ditions that an Ingersoll Maple Leaf you'd be justly proud. You'd think you were a good picker. - » d when you can an Ingersoll Maple for $3.25--or $4.00 if you want the Radiolite that tells time in the dark--you ought to be proud of the chance. Maple Leaf Radiolite $4.00 "'| country ag well as mine. I write this ON EVENTS IN IRELAND! sir Edward Carson Replies to | | Le Matin--Exploiting | | Cork's Mayor. | : i The corporation of Dublin finds it- self in an invidious position. straightened circumstances and bank- | ruptcy ig hanging over the Council | Chamber, This is the result of their pledge of allegiance to-Pail Eireann. | Naturally enough the Local Govern- | ment Board declined to 'foot the | bills" seeing that the Corporation Lad repudiated the government from whose bountiful hands they received | | vera supplies. The stream which | was recognized as putrid had dried | up. A number of corporation im- | | provements have been discontinued | until funds from taxation are avalil- | able. As well the payments of 25 | per cent on wages and salaries are | to be post; d for nine months after becoming due from 1st October. The corporate not refuse te.recognize the Local Goy- | nd the British Treas- ury is to be appealed to for assist. | ance. But they have not yet gone the { whole hog by rescinding their resolu- | tion of allegiance to another form of | government--not by the way yet es- tablished. The corporation is about | to try and effect economies amount- ing to £20,000. One councillor de- | clared that their security was the | best on the continent of Europe. They were giving a city estate and | the entire corporation building. The corporation is surely entitled to self- government if it proves able to em- erge from the financial difficulties | that overhang the council of the | metropolis of Ireland. | Two publicists, J. L. Garvin and | Captain Stephen Gwinn, urge in the | columns of the "London Observer" | the immediate embodying of the Ul- | ster Volunteers. The plea McGarvin {advances is the government should | refuse to permit the mayor of Cork {to make a martyr of himself but that | to counteract any suggestion that | his release was a victory for Sinn | Fein simultaneously. Ulster should be given her antonomy and the Un- | ionist majority should take over once { and for all the. respensibility for | maintaining law and order in their own area. Sweep away Sinn Fein | terrorism and sedition clean out of it. Such a step McGarvin says would be momentous and irrevocable and he thinks it would instantally over- shadow any bad effect that would fol- low a decision to release the Mayor of Cork. After the definite estab- lishment" of administrative anton- omy in Ulster on a thoroughly de- mpcratic system with its own armed power in the shape of embodied vol- unteers McGarvin thinks that further murder and outrage in any part of Irelgnd would be an obvious attack on gvery hope for Irish unity. The proposal looks very well on paper; but McGarvin ought to know by this time that the release of the hunger strikers would be taken as a sign of weakness and would therefore be likely to give an impetus to the cam- paign of crime, and the embodying of the Ulster volunteers would probably have an effect on the other parts of Ireland in a direction not for peace but for war. If Ulster cannot afford protection, however, the protection will doubtless come from Ulster it- self as this question has come to the foremost recently on account of the stand of the Ulster Unionist Council. Every day seems to bring matters nearer a crisis in Ulster. --- The letter from Rev. Father Law- The letter from Father Lawless is likely to be the means of bringing the ministers representing the various religious persuasions together with | & view to the formation of some de- finite action with regard to the crimes generally and the reprisals that have taken place in several towns in Ul- ster. The letter {s an outspoken con- demnation of crime in Catholic Ire- land as well as in the Protestant North and the reverend gentleman's views should be taken full advantage of by the leaders of religious thought. Sir Edward Carson who is holiday- ing at Vichy takes the editor of the "Le Matin" to task for his article on Ireland. "I do not desire to offer any jeriticism on a production so one- sided and unfair" says the honorable gentleman. "I would, however, take the liberty of sending you an extract from a letter of a Roman Catholic priest, which I hope may cause you to reconsider your strictures on the loyal inhabitants of the north of Ire- land.. May I remind you of the action of the brave Ulster division which won such glory and suffered such losses at Thiepval and other battle- fields in France and may I also ask you to compare the action of the loyal people of Ulster in supporting recruiting and conscription when the Sinn Fein organization in the south and west was in close conspiracy with Germany for the overthrow your to you at a moment when I am en- Joying the hospitality of your coun try and may I add to at no time have I ever failed to do what I could, either as a member of the govern- ment or of the House of Commons to show my admiration and respect for your great nation." The letter of a Roman Catholie priest is that refer- red to in the preceding paragraph, and written by Father Lawless, ---- % "It is my painful duty this morn- ing to denounce this awful murder that occurred in the neighboring par- ish of Drumlish," said the Most Rev. Dr. Hoare to his flock at first mass at Longford. Up to yesterday this county and diocese were free from crime and outrage and now they are disgraced by this. violation of the Fifth Commandment "Thou shalt not #!l'--Dby the commission of one of tae four sins that cry to heaven for vengeance, Pray to God to Have mercy upon the soul of this police- man (murdered) and to bring to re- pentance his murderers. It is a of the times to find men who errs in the commandments of God and who are called to teach the same old anathematise. those of their flock who are guilty of the fumdamental truths of Christianity. If this be not done then the Christian religi will, with the lapse of time, e a mockery and a sham and men will turn from its teachings with loathing and disgust. : The Gospel of Sinn Fein, is still be- ing fairly actively practised in seve- ral parts of Ireland but'it would be a mistake to think that no oppositibn is being encountered. It fs of course true that in crime stained districts It is in * now declare that they did | 'class of warfare that not omly ap- It is sweet, pure, rich milk to start with--"whole milk". We collect it daily--where it is produced--in #h Canada's best dairy counties. ; Then, while it denseries, 1s still fresh, Its purity assured by sterilization. Its safety guarded by sealing. You can keep a supply on your pantry shelves--and use it at your convenience. Open a can of Carnation Milk (dilute it as desired) and you have milk of natural consistency for your table, for the children to drink, for cooking, for baby's bottle. For, Carnation Milk is not artificially sweetened. Use as you would fresh milk--for every household need. Part of the water has béen evaporated from it. Carnation Milk is so rich that it takes the place of cream, for coffee and tea, for cereals and fruit. 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It should be Learn 'how to make many new additions to Address our to combat crime and outrage but mi- litary have to a large extent taken their place and when the opposing forces meet the Sinn Fein bandit us- ually comes off second It is a peals to the British soldier, but one in which he is rather an adapt. The police and military are carrying out extensive raids for erms throughout the country and occasionally they come in contact with the lawless rai- ders on a similar mission. The Resto- ration Law is in operation now and it is proving of great benefit to the lawgivers and to tlie oppressed. The case of Lord Mayor McSwiney appears to have caused some theolo, gical controversy amongst the mem- bers of the church. One view is that as he hae deen} Juifheraisly Susi ing suicide while in the fu aon of his genses he should ny been given the sacraments Sonor] 'his relatives be affo consol, ation of even a Christian burial" On the contrary hunger striking 1s said. not to be against the principles of Roman Catholicism. "As a matter of fact there is a diversity of opinion amongst the moral theologians and #8 each thesis receives the support of learned conuists and is backed up by weighty arguments the individual Catholic -is entitled to choose for himself and have the benefit of full doubt. If hunger striking were un- doubtedly wrong the Lord Mayor .would not have been entitled to re- ceive the last sacrament." The ques- tion is further complicated by uncer- tainty as to the precise category of suicide as defined by the church un- der which Mr. MacSwiney's act ought to be placed. Suicide is divided into four categories by the church &nd this particular case would seem to come under "negative and direct sui- cide." According to 'the doctrine of the church this variety "constitutes the same sin as positive ~~icide." It is laid down thut, "in §¥t a man the police force is not in a position ' - ..| for retailers to do without has over his life only a right of use, with corresponding obligations to preserve the object of God's domin- ion, the substance of his life. Hence it follows obviously that he fails in this obligation of usufructuary who reglects the necessary means for the preservation of life." This descrip- 'tion would seem to fit in with Mr. MacSwiney's act and yet he has been receiving from the clergy every spiri- tual attention. It is a case probably of theory and practice. (Father Ber- nard Vaughan is severely takan to task by Miss MacSwiney who criti- cises his theology. It is all very in- teresting. Curfew law is still in force both in Dublin and Belfast. All is quiet in the latter city. Some of the expelled men have returned to work, but this_.) does not apply to the engineering and abipbuiidin trades. In connection 'with the ts to burn Workman Clerk's Limited, James Mackie Limi- ted and several other engineering firms, miilitary are posted at certain danger points and one of His Majes- ty"s destroyers has taken up a posi- tion close to the shipyards and her jor: searchlight flashes over The ity dur- ing the darkness. Evil 8loers are therefore reminded of the strong arm of the law. : Belfast is still being boycotted com mercially; but while travellers are and customers prefer not to see the representatives of the wholesale firms of the boycotted city, trading is Boots Sh mea a Sars at are m Belfast by abelled with the {rail are not 1 customary labels of the a but with plain paper labels. Sq as'not to indicate from whence the goeds come. The fact is it is not Bossibie ing Xeliast as Dublin houses de:line '0 {icroase their credit. The oanks in the South and West hiving head- Quarters in Belfast are being over- looked according to reports in the Public press but it is mot expected that the boycott will last long. In any case the banking business in Ireland is and Has been for some few years WHEN AT THE EXHIBITION Be Sire and See Our Display of Stoves and Ranges The Lighter Day Range is the most complete one on the market. We have also a number of good second-Bhnd Ranges at very low prices in our display room. . LEMMON & SONS. , past a rather renunerative yndertak- ing and it can afford to survive a little sat back. The most Rev. Dr, Mannix has dis- appeared from the limelight since he London for Wales a few weeks ago. It is the Lord Mayor of Cork who is since being exploited for pur- poses of political propaganda. If his welfare had been the chief idera- tion his friends would have confined the activities to inducing him to take food. Instead of concentrating their attention-on this simple and effective solution of the matter his suporters seem to have been more concerned about conduct of an elaborate pub- lic campaign. The hanger strikers friends have but themselves to poli- tical . These were the ups and downs of the patient's condition Then there are the bulletins and re- ports and these are highly confusing ECZEMA 2: the skin. Chase's

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