SATURDAY, AUGUST 20, 1921. THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG. Coniplete September List Now on Sale Dance Records Oh Me! Oh My! Song Fou Trot Mimi {Man-Mue) Song No. Fox-Tro Not So Long Ago--Pox Tact gio aad Prank Crunft Tox aid Frank Crumit t Wi Fun--bfedle Fox-Trot Alp 4Gat atacimbe, Orchestra A-3430 $1.00 A229 The Happy Six $1.00 O'Nell---Medley Waltz Prince' s Dance Orch. a Walts--Modiey Waltz Adin Prince's Dance Orch, Where Is My Daddy Now Blues--Medley Fox-Trot ed Lewis' Jazz Band Ted Lewis' Jazz B Art Hickman's Orchestra Art Hickman's Orchestra Queen of Sheba--Fox-Trot Down Yonder--Medley Ruby--Medley Fox. Trot Vincent . Three O'Clock in the Morning Moonlight I'm Nobody's Ba . Pa De You Ever Think of Me ; You Made Me Forget How to Cry Chatiee} Wild Weeping Blues Mary Stafford and Her I've Lost My Heart to vid Meanest G Mary Stafford and o~ Jo. Band Biese Orchestra Accompaniment 1 Wonder Where are My Sweet, Sweet Daddy's Gone Marion Harris Paul Biese Orch, Ace. Bind Out Malinda Moon Columbia Stellar tte Held ory bey iy a Baby's Hands Reardon Si $1.65 A-3421 $1.0 A-3428 $1.00 A-3423 $1.00 2 The Happy Six Lopez Orchestra Frank Crumit Frank Crumit Marion Harris A-3431 $1.00 A-3433 $1.00 Van and Schenck | A-3427 ? Van and Schenck $1.00 A-3432 1.00 A-3425 $1.00 A-342¢ in pa $1.00 Vocal, There's Sunlight in Your Eyes Charles Hackett Mighty Lak' a Rose | . Life's Railway to Heaven Hulda Lashanska Oscar Seagle and Male le Syartette The Name of Jeous Is So Sweet Oscar Seagle Flows Sascha Jaco pt Heart to Missstiopt I Sascha Juedlnca Rigoletto La donna e mobile . LaTosca Recondita armonia . La Boheme Che gelida manina Thomas Burke R690 : $1.00 Thomas Burke R:76408 $1.50 R-76366 $1.50 Thomas Burke } RIND Thomas Burke N ovelty Havas Metiey folie Peak ER Green, ® Dance wid' a Gal Hota in Hole in © te BET Perera and a , Ianchiat Orit] Woodwind Orchestra Orchestra A-3423 $1.00 E-7160 Woodwind $100 een: {0 A $1.00 e Laurie, Den Richardson / Wild Animal Calle--Death of the Old Lion Ernest at Thompson Seton Wild Animal Calls Hunting Wolves . EE. Thompson Seton A-3131 $100 COLUMBIA GRAPHOPHGNE COMPANY. Teronts Treadgold's Sporting Goods Co. Agents for Columbia Records. 9. C. W. Lindsay, Limited 'Headquarters for Columbia Records = " matte 2 Golumbla Records on Sais at The J.M. Greene Music Co. Lid: ~~, 168 PRINCESS SYREEY = = They stood together by -the open door. £ "Heart of my heart," he whisper- ad, "how I love you!" + "And how I Jove you!' she ans- wered--"Light of my days, light of my Yioughts, light of my very ex- wy light--"" "Lucy," shouted her father's angry Yolce ffom above, "just put out that light-at once and get to bed!" --------ei-- He whosa.wind is rich in the mem ory of moral victories will not easily believe the world a scene of moral defeats, - | The Hero i the White By Katé Edmonds. Pat 3 "Gee, it's stupid enough these summer places," Gray. around yawned Perry "I believe I'l] take the little blow the blues put of my disposition. Wish I was back at the office with the. symphony of the ticked tape in my ears!" He sighed profoundly, saun- | tered around to the garage, ran his racing car out into the perfect high- | way and stopped. "Wonder which | way I'll go--guyeas I'll let the wind blow me whither it will/* He glanced at a weathervane and swung the car to the south, "now for an adventure --me the hero, of course, and--" He stopped open-mouthed, as a big car shot around a curve without warn- ing, and swept on toward the hotel he had just left. The car seemed to be full of women in summery frocks and hats, but its speed prevented re- cognition, As it flew past him something white and filmy floated out behind, hovered over Perry's blond head and then settled like a great white moth over his face. He was conscious of fragrance of flower gardens and per- fumes of Araby, as he detached the hat from his face and -surveyed the lovely creation of georgette crepe and tiny flowers, 'Forget-me-nots! Lo, the poor hero--and enter the hat. Heigh ho--for romance! Take it back? Not yet!" Perry talked to himself or to his car, which he call- ed "Lizzie." It was such an expensive, highbred car that if it could have under- stood Perry's nickname for it the lit- tle gray racer would" have simply reared itself on the hind axles and run over its owner in sheer disgust. Perry raced down the mountain- side and then back again, and some- how his blues vanished forever that day. But it was later in the day. He managed to be on time for luncheon and was the first one in the hotel restaurant. There was not ofie girl there who ought to belong to that fluffy white hat. His sister Nan worried - him. "What's the matter Perry, child?" she mocked, "have you been lonely today?" "Good company," he retorted. '"Who?'" She wns curious. Perry did know such fascinating men, "Myself," coldly. "Don't wonder you look grumpy," was her sisterly shot. "Where's mother?" "Lunching upstairs. Mrs. Ripley came today. She was tired." "I like her. Thought she was go- ing to her child," said Perry, choosing his dessert. "She did." "Must be a horror if she can't bring it down here to eat?" "Perry Gray you are too shock- Ing!" "Well, it's the truth. Children are too messy for words." "Gertrude is a dear," and there was a naughty twinkle in Nan' 8 love- ly eyes. Perry ravi, "Want to play ten- nis?" "Can't-got to amuse Gertrude." "Bother--say, Nan," in a coaxing tone. "Do you know any girl who wears a white hat?" Nan stared. "Dozens." "Well, this is a very white hat--I mean, its extraordinary pretty--all sorts of little blue flowers, you know --periwinkles," with mendacious ex- actitude, "Yes, periwinkles--Ilittle bunches of 'em---smells like a garden --nhonest, it does!" "Perry! Where did you find that hat?" she gasped. "Mt found me," he chuc"led. "Tell me who owns it and I'll confess." "It I dofi't tell you?" "I'll find out--I'm going to marry the girl who owns it." Nan laughed: hysterically. "'Sup- pose I told you it was worn by the Ripley infant--" "It was?" the. light died out of Perry's face. Heartwhole as he was, he had built'up a romance from the coming of the "white méth" as he called the pretty foolish hat. "Well, her mother ought to Have more sense than to put such a hat on a child's head. No wonder it blew off." They were mounting the stairs now, and at the top théy met Mrs. Gray, '""Have you found the hat, "Nan?" she askéd. "I know where it is," said Nan, 'quickly and; fying past her brother, she slipped into his room and came out with the white hat perched on 'her pretty head. "Did Perry find it?" mother, "Yes." asked his admitted : Perry feeling ey ™ some one to play a set with me. | ne i ing high in the air when he saw the Old car out again.and. see if-I-ean't- | Do I have to see the Ripley infant?" pleaded. Mrs. Gray laughed. "Run along, do, Perry--you are so foolish." Perry, in white flannels, was leap- white hat coming across the lawn, Nan was wearing it, but Perry scarce- ly saw the hat or the wearer. He was looking at the other girl--such a charming slip of a girl, with red hair &ot Bagel Oya Se Wore uw HIE ress and a blue hat covered with little blue flowers. By the time Perry had seen all this his feet had touched the ground again, and he amazed his op- ponent by walking right off the colurt to meet his sister. "I'm 'going to marry her," Perry said to himself, as Nan introduced him. "This is my brother Perry, Ger- trude--you remember Gertrude Rip- ley, don't you, Perry." Perry blushed as he bent over her cool little hand. "I couldn't forget," he said warmly, then he added con- fidentially: "Do you mind telling me what kind of flowers those are, Miss Aipley?" She laughed and glanced at Nan. "Periwinkles." Perry sighed. "Forget-me-nots or periwinkles--it matters not--they all mean the same thing to me!" ana no ong but Perry understood what he meant until their wedding day, when he tald Gertrude all about it. But Gertrude didn't seem to understand what he meant, even then. "You have talked about forget-me- nots and white hats and periwink- les," she sald a little jealously, "and I don't know what you mean, Perry, dear." Perry smiled feebly. "On the day 1 met you--you passed me in a carload of girls and your blue hat--your white hat blew into my face and I sald I was going to marry the girl who owned the hat." Gertrude smiled complacently, but perhaps there was a tiny twinkle in her eye. "That was mother's hat-- and I wasn't in the car at all--" "Nan said it was her hat!" cried the bewildered bridegroom. "It was," sald his lovely wife. "Mother had just given it to her. Really, Perry, mother is a widow and-- '""Hat or no Bat, id interrupted Perry, kissing his bride, "I'm safely married to the only gir] I could ever love, and that's enough for me." CANTEEN PROFITS. £7,000,000 For the United Services Fund. News of the World, London Total profits of considerably over £7,000,000 are shown by the Navy and Army Canteen Board, and Expe- ditionary Force Canteens, according to the report of the Committee on Canteen Profits just issued. A sum of £691,220 was expended in the sup- ply of comforts to the troops during the war, There has been handed over to the United Services Fund a sum of £3,049,000 in cash, and an amount of £1,000,000 funding loan, having a value at cost of £800,000, while to the forces of America and the various' Dominions and Colonies a sum of £640,000 in cash was given. In addition, a further amount of £1,- 500,000 funding loan, having a value at cost of £1,200,000, and £909,000 in cash, ig held. The amount avail- able as the share of the United Ser- vices Fund will not be less than the figure of £7,000,000, which has been quoted by Lord Byng as the amount which the fund expects to receive. There remains, proceeds the Commit- tee's report, the question of the pro- vision of working capital for the new organization' "We consider that it would be far preferable that the Navy, Army and Air Force Institutes should not be financed from money derived from the pockets of ex-Ser- vice men, even if this money is re- garded as being a loan at interest. We do not recommend, however, that the institutes should be taken over by the State, since we see consider- able objection to this method of con- ducting a trading organization." It was suggested that the Treasury shoyld advance a loan as working, capital, repayment to be made over a period of ten years, ° The Time to Learn. The chap who had persisted in walking on the extreme outer edge of the sea wall presently tumbled into the water, and while splashing yelled at the top of his voice: "Help! Help! I can't swim!" "Well, young fellow," was the eooij observation of the self-possessed man | who stood looking on. "I'd say that now is certainly the time, if ever, for you to learn." S------ Removing Stains, Soften old stains with castor oil in | lard and they will come out more easily. Theq gasoline or benzine will rather flat. "Guess I'll go out and remove all traces of the medium. A Se U can't do you suffer from head or any of the t thousand afflicted at one time or another. hast Phim) ure, Se 5 o nature t| Meat Acel Pata Pills. them in Pain Pills of forming a drug pyle WHY SUFFER PAIN? 36 Jouneit in business, social or home life if ache, backache, neuralgia, and one pains with which all of us are | Pain IIS There are no dissgroenbie alter effects. Dr. Miles' Anti- STOP THE PAIN = *without upset Jigestion, drowsiness, Guaranteed monthly pains, real physical danger. But there t are not promptly relieved by CYTE ANT RKUVENATIC -- pissing In She Nad, or danger Mahood's Drag Store -------- TROTZKY TRIES T0 EXPLAIN The Seeming Cont Contradiction of Soviet Leaders' Acts Re- garding Capital. Riga, Latvia, Aug. 1.-- (By Mail.) -- Leon Trotsky, the Bolshevik War Minister in- Russia, attempted to ex- tionale at Moscow the seeming con- tradiction in the acts of the:Soviet leaders. who are resorting a limited measure of capitalism in Russia witile advocating, in speeches to the Internationale, the abolition of capi- tal elsewhere. The Pravda quotes Trotsky as say- Ing that compromises with capitalism were justifiable in Russia as the dfc- tatorship of the proletariat has been firmly established there, but that no compromises were allowable to Reds attempting to bring: about revolu- tion elsewhere, The official Bolshevik viewpoint, as expressed in speeches by Lenine and in thelr various newspapers, is that all changes being made in Russia, all concessions being granted to capital and all seeming digressions from a strict Communist policy are either made necessary by the poor economic condition of the country or are es- sential to permit Communism to exist in the future. The disastrous economi¢ condition in Russia was frankly admitted in speeches at the Congress by various Russian delegates. Trotzky is quot- ed as having told the delegates that "it is easy to be a Communist if one looks only at the cheering picture of Red flags at the Internationale, but the true Communist is he who can starving children." Zinovieff in his closipg speech to the conference, as reported in' the Isvestia, said that in 1917 everybody "laughed at us, considered us dream- ers." The first Internationale Con- gress, he said, was attended by only a handful. The second was more im- portant. The third, he said, has shown that despite all difficulties, the Third Internationale will be most powerful even in America, While permitting of some excep- tions, such as temporarily at least allowing the American I.W.W. to continue as an independent organiza- tion, the Internatiunale congress de- cided that the revolutionary {dea must be fought for through existing trade unions, such as the Americdh Federation of Labor. All small or- ganizations net affiliated with the large trade unions were requested to "liquidate themselves," their mem- bers being instructed to unite with labor unions and win them over to Communism. The conference.decided upon un= dying warfare against the so-called Amsterdam Internationale, which in- cludes trade unions working for soc- ialism, but not for the dictatorship of the proletariat, EFFORTS TO SPREAD COMMUNISTIO IDEAS Among the Women and the Young People of the World. Riga, Latvia, Aug: 1.-- (By Mail.) --Efforts to spread communistic re- volutionary ideas among the women and young people of the world were outlined recently at Moscow at two congresses, the first that of Women Communists of the World and the second the Youmg People's Commun- ist Internationale, meeting in copnec- tion with the Third Internatfonale Congress, 3 At the Women Communists' con- gress, in which Clara Zetkin, a Gom- munist member of the German Re- ichstag, and Madam Krupskaya, the wife of Lenine, participated in the leadership, work already done along these lines was outlined. Madam Kollantai, one of the lead- ers of the Russian Bolshevik revolu- tion, told the women's congress that the movement had had very little success in America, where, she said, the movement must he developed in the existing trade unions including many thousands of women workers. Along with propaganda of Com- munistic ideas, the conference advo- cated spreading intelligence on the ideas of birth control and other ad- vanced sociological theories. Actording to the Magcow news- papers, great importance was at- tached to the Young People's Com- munist Internationale congress, Leon Trotzky, the war minister, speaking to this congress, sald that the largest part of the youths among the work- ers and peasants took part in the Russian revolution and aided the Red arnty. i -------- Pullman Air Service. The Royal Dutch air service, which is a private enterprise aided by the Dutch government, has commenced operating a luxurious aeroplane ser- vice between Croydon (near London) England, and Dutch cities. These fiying '"'Pullmans" provide softly cushioned armchairs, with writing tables for each passenger, and the in- teriors of the cars are fitted with satinwood panels, mirrors and so on. The arrangements include one depar- ture each day from Croyden at 10 a.m., halting at Rotterdam for ff- teen minutes and continding to Am- sterdam. The fare from Croyden to Amsterdam is £10 10s. Between the latter place and Copenhagen air con- nections are providéd. The through fare to Copenhagen is £34 6s. -------------- - It does not take people long to forgét favors, but they will carry! memory of a slight to the grave them, Why is it that the heat Will keep a shan awake nights and yet puts him wo sisep in church? plain to the delegates | £OMDOMDE. Lh. recent congress of the Third Interna- I's casy to own] the AMBERO VERYONE can afford Mr. Amberola--the perfected musical instsument which is actually the world's greatest Despite the fact that the Amberola sweetness, and realism all of the so-called its price is unbelievably moderate, E -- > 0 Fm had OND ENERO of Edison's New Diamond phemegroph value. § actually surpasses. in talking macisiner", . Because the permauent Diamond Point Reproducer does away with the bother snd' expense of changing needles, and berol Records are practically i in because the Edison Am- destructible, the Amberois is maintaix. the most ecamomical phonograph to If you enjoy good music, the Amberola because you taday, J ask us for full information. astonish you-- which we will happy to arrange. and if you have refrained from naturally believe it to be ¢ The low price of the Amer em) [*Heululy when you hear the convenient payment terms Days of Good Music--FREE! Three Ask us how you can have the Amberola days--absolutely free, and without in your own home for three obligation to buy. 1 you can't come in--simply phone or write us a postcard, The J. M. GREENE MUSIO CO. "The Home of Good Music." Princess Street. & J X< still be one and look upon Moscow's | SHINGLES AND ROOFING is the best on the market. Also Ru-Ber-Oid Wall Board. Make us prove it. See our window display ! . & W. H. COCKBURN & CO. Corner Wellington and Princess Street. "Life' Phone 316. s Minor Ailments 'should be promptly attended to It is well to kee healthy and bow the liver active, stomach S regular, the mind clear, alert: and efficient. Beecham's according to directions will help digestive processes active. Life Pills taken to keep the wi ibe more satisfactory and successful by tak BetUS 2 Sold everywhere in Canada * In boxes, 25c., 50c. ICE CREAM AS DESSERT For a nice dessert at small cost order MASOUD'S ICE CREAM and you will be delighted with ity . rich flavor and nourishing effects, Ask for it at the Stores or order it direct. 238 Princess St. K ingston, Ont. MASOUD'S "Phone 980 nk. General Papoulas, commander of the Green army in Annatolla is 85 years old, | ha 'When Sno: safled westward all of Europe beyond Breslau to the sast was a wilderness,