Daily British Whig (1850), 23 Sep 1924, p. 7

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gh ng el THE SUBSCRIPTION RATES: (Daily Kdition) year, ia of year, . United States nr) an : REPRESENTATIVES deka Bt: Ronsren: 100 Kiang St. W, 87.50 to rural offices, $2.50 ure holds its own beauty contest. Prosperity seems about to begin to commence ito start to return. Monday papers are interesting if '| church edifice occupies the site prince, who was placed in the unde- GOOD OUT OF BAD. sirable position of being the butt of While 'we are constantly hearing | the alleged quarrels of the idle rich of former church edifices being con- | in whose company he was thrown. verted into lodge halls, garages and | Some American cheese factories, trom Colojado COM-| yin: a4 coandals in the entertainment es the news that a tabernacle, just | colony. If there were such things, built by Free Methodists, was rear- | it must have been doubly unpleasant 6d from timbers and materials tak- for the Prince of Wales, for like en from a once notorious gambling |; royal parents His Highness resort and dance hall and from a for-| frowns upon some of the goings-on mer brewery. ,The pulpit was con-| n pen society. In Canada, the structed from. the top of the bar and | ype wil) be In 4 purer ' atmos- the altar from other parts. The phere. He will enjoy his ranch life of | more than he does the ballroom, for the former brewery. The builders) yo ner to the British throne is not could have had Yo sympathy with | the dance-mad young man the Ame- the views of those church folk Who | rican press would have people be- have nothing to do with the 8IVings | jyope. His thoughts are on greater of brewers, distillers or those who | things than pleasure, and in the trafficked In intoxicating Hquors. | great Canadian west, where life is They took what was placed at their | simple and yet arduous, his view- disposal and turned what was once | potat will be further broadened. On used for evil into a structure that | his ranch he will enjoy the real rest will do good. It is symbolig of the | pe sought when he left the Mother- turning of a bad man into'a 800d | 1ang. Canada welcomes His Royal man. It is written that even "the Highness, whom it loves and honors, desert shall rejoice and blossom as for the prince has proved himself the rose." a worthy descendant of the great Queen Victoria, whose memory fis FRANCE AND QUEBEC. imperishable. It is recorded that when Quebec | was captured by the British in the year 1759, the French people in| Canada. numbered sixty-five thou- sand. Thanks to the Quebec Act and the Constitutional Aet, the pro- vince of Quebec has remained French ever since. Today the French In Canada total over three and a half million, an increase of more than fif- ty-fold in 165 years under British rule. In all those years Quebec's mother country, France, has just doubled in population. Had Quebec routine and now appear only once. | Even the pews of clergymen are of- CHURCH-GOING, It would appear to be growiag olg- fashioned for people to attend church service twice of a Sunday. Ministers have to impress upon their congre- gations that there is service in the evening as well as in the morning. Yet some of the best of men, who twenty years ago were always seen in evening service, have changed their }| France, there would be no French- " { Canada today. everywhere, nat- y vey Satu, evaryw | trustful and multiplied | self, for it has not depended upon | engrafted upon the soil and are a Increased in the same ratio as witb > Lh i orvide en empty a e evening service. Times have changed. One very god- ly man once put it this way: He never realized fully that Sunday is a day of rest. He attended morning service; taught a class in the Sunday school in the afternoon, and flaished the day at evening service, He found Sunday, after years of this But Quebec became wichin {t- French immigration. Its increase is its own. The French of Quebec, are contented people. Thousands who press despatches | their pews at Sunday morning and | | left their native province to go to | the United States have returned and Many are invited to weddings be- | &Te satisfied that conditions at home cause their presents are needed. {are better than across the border. ---------------------------- | you care for mortality statistics. routine, to be anything but a day of rest, and came to the conclusion that a Sunday evening spent in the posom of his family gvas quite in order. Thig The only thing harder than living within an income is living without one. It there is no hell; shall we consign the rich pegple we envy? the world flat; now they think it square. Horrid thought. It may be a 4i- seased gland that makes reformers s0 good. You can't always tell a. self-made men, but it isn't necessary. He'll it. vig t takes a lot of herd practice to some girls that charming natur- ~ ------------ . When your girl is out of town you loat around a drug store and it. there is anything in evolution, ition should in time produce " % A village is a place Where Cen- answers you when she gets talking to Billy. In these paint and powder days ~ flowers are not the only things that are born to blush unseen. : Too often people who have sense enough to interest you have too finch to de interested in you. Oorrect this sentence: "You must Jess, "sald the doctor, "but don't ¥e up your favorite dishes." fter hie strenuous vacation the ace will be entitled to at least - month in which to recuperate. { Premier MacDonald has just in- este $150,000 in a Scotch biscuit 'C . Sounds plutocratic for a labor leader. ; \ If politicians really have faith in people, why don't they suggest government funds with a Plate? 5 -------------- Armenia Is reported to have been 'shaken by a severe earthquake. Will the woes of that unhappy country cease. A A boy bank messenger who fled with $772,000 of Liberty bonds has acquitted by a Chicago jury. case of "emotional im- "There i» no Fevolution in Chile, told. All that has happeened that Its president has put on # and taken a six months' vaca- ~~" the Lord hate: yea, seven "Ah abomination to him: A. proud 'a lying 'and hands that ' 1 A heart that { hag dectded to accept twenty thou- {sand dollars for lighting the city's {6 what place | Streets last year, the same amount | While the Prince of Wales enjoyed {aroused with ye viewpoint is not comforting to cler- gymen in town and city charges, for they desire to see their flock befors them twice on a Sunday. It has been sald that the minister who has a liv- ing message to deliver will fill his church at all times. But this is not the case. Living messages are deilv- ered Sunday after Sunday in church- es where the attendance is small. Yet the preacher's message.is not in vain, 3 There are two clubs in Kingston which have wrought great good dur- ing the past three years. They are called' Rotary and Kiwanis. What- ever they undertake to do, they suc- ceed. These two clubs might start out on another tack and see what they can do to fill the churches on Sunday evenings. / STREET LIGHTING CHARGE. The public utilities commission accepted for severkl years past. There is no good reason for charging more, The city is the largest elec- tical consumer. Commercial and power rate have dropped continually, 80 why should the street lighting charge not be less than it was five or six years ago? The lpcal commis sion is satisfied that twenty thousand dollars is enough, but the concur- rence of the provincial commission has to be secured. The latter sees the justice of thig rate but proposed that gome meter tests, should be made. There has been & long delay In doing this, so the utilities com- mission is going to close up its 1923 business by accepting twenty thou- sand dollars 'from the city. If meter tests would show that a further fe- duction might be made, it would be worth while having them carried out, but the city council 1s satisfied to continue paying twenty thousand dollarg for street lighting and héy- Ing a few lamps added to the System each year without increase. KINGSTON IN 1852 Viewed Through Our Files The Bditor's Return. Nov. 3:--I have just got bome to your embraces, my dedr Whig, an find 'everything in tolerable good o der, though I wish your press man would have made your face more resplendent, for what is a good ar- ticle unless it is clearly printed? I have completed a journey of 1,500 miles (the Saguenay, New York and Boston) during which I have met with every personal attention, with less inconvenience than in former times I encountered in going to Bath by land. But such is steam and such are railroads that time and Space. are annihilated. QUEEN'S UNIVERSITY, Queen's university tomorrow en- ters upon its eighty-third session. It was granted a royal charter by Queen Victoria in the year 1841, and through all those years ft has been true to British ideals. A goodly portion of its staff has come from seats of learning in the Biritish Isles, and its present principal is one of . ' Scotland's distinguished education- Relief At Last. % alists and preachers. Last session Nov. 24:--An arrangement has the student registration was in the! been entered into betweén the head vicinity of thirty-two hundred, and{ of the government and the city au- the recent summer school had he | thorities by which the act recently largest registration of any similar] Passed to enable the City. of 'King- school in Canada. Queen's, how- i do arrow. £45.00, Will come 6ver, no longer aims at' a largely in- 1s to ape prs - th aor creased student attendance, It is guarantee, and all tha city debts seeking quality rather than quantity. are to be payed off, including, .of Its medical school was' the first of course, the great t due the Com- the faculties to limit the freshman mercial Bank, ch consents to class, fifty being considered a-lar, give up its Sebentdres gt par. The 'enough entrance class. ' It wag thus| difference between the interest mow enabled to choose the more 'pfomis- paid on the existing debts and the ing young men. The faculty of sci- interest to be paid on the mew debt ence has also raised its matriculation bk jn the iY lasq nine requirements, The arts mairicula- youné. tion has always been high. - When t™ Cash and Carry. young men or women are graduated! Nov. 30:--In consequence of the at Queen's, they have been thorough-| serious illness of the carrier of ly trained in whatever faculty they|the Daily British Whig on the north have passed through. "The name of! eastern rotind, a great maay of our Queen's is known throughout the | Subscribers did not receive their pa- length and breadth df Canada and | POMS yesterday, and may not again oven further afield, for to. its halls| "2t!! they call at the office. come students from the United Stats] \ T° inh ©s and Newfoundiand., That tne ges- slon just apening will witness asfured things done ig : 5 ; SIT as BACK ON BRITISH SOI: | September 28rd There was a bitter te be- Teen ugiand and ce in 1698 ST . 83 to the status of the Iroquois. Exch satisfac over being again on|.p the 'nations claimed sovereignty British soil. He will appreciate the | over them as subjects, The treaty of fact. thét British Canada will not in-Ryswick had ended the war between trude upon his privacy, much as {t| Willlam 'of Orange and Lonis XIV. 'would like to entertain him. His|and i Sovscqdenes the Earl of Bélle- Royal Highness' Long Islan mont, Gov r of New York, return- ol : ng weniger ed to Frontemac at' : : that Jealousies ore Frenchmen taken prisoner "during Bo dr the campaign fu the New World. The : © circle of this high{ ov. who accompanied them de American goclety and that things his three weeks of vacation in_ the United States, he will feel a certain becoming: unpleasant to the| Iroquois who had been capiured by Fa ¥ the French. Count de Frontenac, DOW a man of great years, was still governor in New France. The de- mand of the Englishman filled Fron- tenac with fiery indignation because ! of its assumption that the Iroquois | were subjects of Britain, not Fringe. ! The Earl of Bellemont, however, was | of the same flery temperament, and | to Foontenac's refusal he retorted | that he would arm every mar in his | provinces to assist the iroquolis | against the French. In an attempt | at settlement Capt. John Schuyler | wag sent to Quebec to negotiate, He | Was entertained at an elaborate din- | ner party at 'Chateau St. Louis on this day in 1698, at which the great old French governor was host. The Kings of France and of England weré toasted, and the health: drunk ! of Frontenac and Bellemont. Then | the newly made peace was solemnly | acknowledged, but when the festivi- | ties were over Capt. Schuyler $was| sent back with dispatches breathing | defiance over the Iroquois. In two | months' time the beloved old Fron-| tenac had died at his post, ------------ | That | Body | of | a Pours By James W. Barton, M.D, A Surgeon's Advice. One of the best known surgeons | in North America had a very inter- esting article in one of the medical | journals recently. { He was deploring the fact that | many people who had pain in the re- gion of the appendix, complained so often about it, that surgeons were ! tempted to operate, in the belief that the condition wag worse than that which really existed. | The very fact that the pain is in| the region of the appendix seemed | to have such an effect upon their | minds, that they imagined a great! deal of their symptoms. i He cited the case of a weil known tack of appendicitis, and it was only | by a miracle that the operation was | performed in time to save his life. | Within the next few weeks three | of his friends consulted the surgeon, | claiming to have the same symptoms as those complained of by their friend, and requesting operaiion be- fore it was too late. It took a good straight talk on the part of the surgeon fo convinze them that nothing was wrong with their appendix. A good deal of the pain in that region is caused by gas, and to' the pulling on the intestine due to the dropping. of all the organs from loose, weak, or flabby abdominal muscles, And this surgeon suggesied the means for correcting the condition. Was it surgical? : Not at all. He gtiggested that the treatment should often be of a fourfold nature- dietary, mechanical, medicinal and psychological, One particular suggestion was of particular interest to me, because I've been trying to tell it to f>iks for a long time. ' He spggested a good abdominal belt and some physical training, so ag to lift the abdominal organs up into their normal positions, so that they would do their work properly. You will remember that the tight- ening of the muscles of the abdomen made the waist smaller, gave a pro- per carriage, and put the abdominal organs into their right positions. It you want quitk results then, se- cure a good abdominal bell. Your femily physician Will advise you about it. manded, however, the releage of the | But the big thing if you are nét 0 old, or too weak, is to sirengthen the abdominal muscles, so that they will be what they were meant to be, that iz #m abdominal belt. Simply He on back on floor, a ralse lege--knees straight--till the body and legs form two sides of a square, not any more. Repeat this slowly eight to ten times, about three times a day, and you will not have to worry about those false ap- pendix pains. ' I ------------. 3 [Youth Amiversary Of the Great War ' R - September 28rd, 1014. The German left wing, under Gen, Von Kiuck, is being turned by the Allies, who now outnumber. the Ger- mans two to ome in this section of the line. The French along the right bank of the river Oise have ad- vanced ten miles. There are over a million French and British troops engaged along the entire front, with nearly half that number in reserve. England is amazed at the sinking of thrée British cruisers by German submarines yesterday. Germafiy has frankly avowed that it is her plan to reduce British naval supremacy by submarine raids and the sowing of mines, but it came as a shock that such big ships could be so easily de- ¢ a Eo DAILY BRITISH WHIG Fall Overcoat and Suit Sale "A MAN'S AT HIS BEST WHEN CORRECTLY DRESSED" Men's and Young Men's Suits Extra Special Values $18, $22.50, $24.50, $27.50 Suit Value Extraordinary, smartly tailor- ed, smart pattern--the greatest value we have offered for many a season at $2950 SEE OUR New Topcoat The Preston--The Regent Made from a nice quality Eng- lish Covert Cloth, in newest light shades: Bronze, Green or Grey -- Slip-on and Raglan models. BIBBY'S SPECIAL Fine English Cheviots and Worsteds Rich, plain shades of Brown, Grey or Blue, Herringbone de- sign, fancy Worsted viots--neat stripes, plaids, etc. All newest colorings. Men's and Young Men's Models. Headquarters for citizen who really had a severe at- | & 1. Farm of 150 acres, 11 miles from Kingston on the main high- way, good dwelling with good cellar, furnace and cistern; base- ment barn, nearly new, with stabling for 25 horses. Another ha; house, hen house, hog pen and granary; 110 acres of good clay loam under cultivation; excep- tionally well watered; quarter mile to cheese factory and one- " half mile to school. Price $7,500. 2. A First class farm of 200 acres at $10,500. 3. A nice farm of 40 acres about one mile from thriving village with high school. Reliable Fire Insurance Come panies Represented. i Money to Loan on Mortgages. TT. J. Lockhar t, ~ Real Estite and Insurance * 58 BROCK ST., KINGSTON Phone 322J or 1797J. Mrs. 8. P. Dodds, Cherry Vattey, || has arrived home from Europe, hav- | ing spent four monthg in England ||} and France. Hon. Andrew Haydon and W. J. McKerracher; Ottawa, old Perth | "Limited $2500 See Our $9.50 Boys' Suits Sizes 27-to 34, BIBBY'S Trunks, Sui and Che- Designed and Executed by Craftsmen of Training Estimates on All Classes of Work Carefully Given "The McCallum "Granite Co., 807 Princess St., Kingston. boys, contributed handsomely to a bazaar held by Perth ladies for charitable purposes, nm Dominion of Canada (Refunding Loan 1924) 44% Bonds Dated October 15th, 1924 Denominations: $100, $500, $1,000. to principal ,» and Bonds in denominations eins oan and Bonds ts dsnouiy All Bondy uiny be regigiated of $500 and authorized » to 96.79, or a yield rate of of this issue is limited to $50,000, Bonds of over $107,000,000, h. make immediate ication. Bonds are offered for delivery in interim form about October 15th, 1924, if issued and delivered to us. w as and Price 97.and interest, to yield 4.73%, HANSON BROS. 160 St. Joraes Street Felephone Main 8071 -------- i - ---- -- APPLICATION FORM HANSON BROS. , i ot : : 4 ; - & Name: ......| Address... J... We Offer ACADIA APARTMENTS, ,% First Mortgage 185 Yr. 13% Ti Morig rh £5 rR x JOHN x Investment Securities SMBs sbessetcantettsnrnsens betes ence BEET crt rts nss srs crt van rss brat nnannne ... Price 981, and decrued interest 15 yield 6.85%. STON WARD Princess St., Kingston. we. Due. October 15th, 1944 Puff Boxes, Combes, Trinket Boxes, Three Piece Manicure Sets, ets. For One Week Only, aware Telephone Queen sq Secassinnanieaisinaeiaa 1924 Dominion of Canada 15th October 1944, at 97 and RTETTER OAL QUA ET ready for the cold wave. It is just as necessary to have coal in the house as it is to<have the medicine chest properly stocked with remedies. May- be it 4s somewhat more im- portant. If you keep warm the chances are you'll keep your health, | Crawford 2)' PHONE », QUERN ST. LIMITED Sinking Fund Gold Bonds Due Sept. 1st, 1939 -

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