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Daily British Whig (1850), 14 Mar 1918, p. 4

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___PAGE FOUR THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, "THURSDAY; MARCH 14, 1918. THE BRITISH WHIG! 85TH YEAR 1 Commissic i ™ Published Daily and Sem!-Weekly by THE BRITISH WHIG PUBLISHING President Editor ahd Managing-Director J. @. Ewott Leman A. Guid Telephones: Business Office Wastol SUBSCRIPTION RATES (Dafly Edition) One year, delivered in city 0 One year, if paid in advance ..... 0 00 50 38 5 One year by mail to rural offices §2 One year, '~ United States 2 (Semi-Weekly Edition) One year, by mall, cash 0 One year, If not pald in advance $1.50 ear, 10 United States 1.60 x and three months pro rata, | MONTREAL REPRESENTATIVE R. Bruce Owen 123 St. Peter St, TORONTO REPRESENTATIVE F.C. Hoy .... 1005 Traders Bank Bldg UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE F.R Northrup, 225 Fifth Ave, New York F.R.Northrup, 1510 Ass'n Bldg, ( hicago | The ape served both as Letters to the Editor are published | only over the actual name of the writer. Attached 18 one of the best job printing offices in Canada. The eircuiation of THRE BRITISH WHIG is authenticated by the ABC Andit Byrean of Circulations. ISH Shae J | unprejudiced LAD X | A scoffings A PROPER The & | ment to ti { the Legislat CHANGE. if an amend- wl law is adopted by , will have the charge | of truancy cases. Hitherto the Police have had control. It helpful for school y handle the cases, "The of- not and by { judicious handling can be shown the {error of t The boards will | also abandon the term of "truant of- | ticers" and call the person to whom the work will be assigned "'attend- lance officers." Women can be the | oft'cers, and it is a good plan, for they have the gentleness and per- suasiveness to bring the délinquents back to normal and sane conditions. tees, 118 twill be more boards i« 'fenders are eriminals, ways THE APE'S TURN TO LAUGH. The ape has the joke on homo ! superbus this time, if the certainly testimony of Prof. | Wood Jones, of London, is accepted. | Ever since the time of Charles Dar- | win apes have been rather put to 't {to keep a stiff upper lip amid the that attend that gentle- man's eruel imputation. His version | {ot the family relationship, as all | know, is that Adam was a descendan' of Jocko. It is hard to prove a general nega- tive Probably the apes refrained from the hopeless attempt to prove| | that sonre rash member of apedom | had not at some time or other en-| gendered the new race. As for men, they were observed to cast ethnic. faults and cosmic ipdecencies lightly upon the 1 laden backs: a grandfather Undoubtely the first of these inflictions must have been the most dolorous. Each, it can be Imagined, had much rather be the result than the cause: the ape through an under- developed feeling of moral responsi- bility, the man through a highly Nuneturabie vanity. What a relief to 0 their and as a scapegoat. What trops do you Intend to raise in your garden? Every bit will help. | os a ---------- i The Turks played the "hit and run" game when they fled before the | British who captured Hit { The Dominion Government has | redeemed its prohibition pledges to the hilt. This a triumph for Unlonism. ' | i is The New York Times declares that Germany has no military 'con- quest to boast of ;\ her victories are the product of hei propagandists, not of her soldiers. The Ontario Government has ar- ranged with the banks, whereby any | farmer may get a eredit up to $200 for the purpose of buying seed for his own agricultural purposes. Toronto is peeved because gas has been raised to ninety cents a thou-| sand cubic feet, an increase of ten cents. Here in Kingston we are now | paying $1.50 and no one has kicked. It is declared in Ottawa that' "in| view of the war burden and the war financing" the budget to be present- ed to Parliament about the end of March will be the most interesting ever brought down. A United States Government mar- ket report states 'that plans have been announced for the opening of retall shops for the sale of horse | meat in Omaha and some other cities' in "that section. Only young un-| broken stock will be used. Ugh! W. B. Northrup, K.C., Belleville, | appointed to the clerkship of the Hoube of Commons, has a judicial mind, is free from aggressive parti- zanship and will fill the office with dignity. He kmows parliamentary procedure for he spent many years in the House as a member. The Toronto Globe is convinced that the nationalizseties of all the railways is the only sufficient remedy for the confusion that exists in transportation. The Dominion should insist on taking over the pro- fitable-Hnes if the unprofitable are to be added to the public burden. On Monday a campaign will bo apse in all the leading urban cen- t of Ontario for the purpose of enlisting boys for farm work. Last year seven or eight thousand boys were enlisted ag soldiers of the soil. This year it is hoped to obtain the services of fifteen thousand. Instead of jailing Capt. Bailey, the C.A.MC. otficer who stated at a To- Yonto meeting that he was told that ninety per cent. of the soldiers in the S=i_.trénchies were druuk on Christmas Day, the Toronto police magistrate should have sent him to an asylum The man who sériously repeated stich a statement is not right in the Dr. Frankl Johnson, Toronto, speaks with knowledge when he says schools pupils should be given a good training vot only along ordinary edu- cational lines, but also that educa< tion should include certain guidance that would be a help when the young after school days entered industrial lite. Too many children left school at 14 years of age without having had . traiving that would prevent them be- coming drifters in life, apes, then, to learn that man is their papa,* and whaf a noble pain to man to learn that their cute imitative tricks are honestly come by! | be emphati | to-day: "I | career, BEGIN THE GOOD WORK. The smell of spring reminds one| that preparation should be made for | the Greater Production campaign. | Will the general committee of 1917 | continue the god work this year? 1t has been stated that they will. If} this is so then a start should be] made, the campaign at least could be | mapped out. The indications are that many groups and associations will be in the gardening business, and may good luck attend their ef- forts. But it should be.understood that the Greater Production Com- mittee in Kingston, a part of the Ontario Resources Committee, should be the rallying body for the work of the season. FEvery group taking part in producing food stuffs should have a representative at the Greater Pro- duction Board so that the work in Kingston can be co-ordinated and the inspiration of various bodies, deeply interested in raising garden | truck, giving force and enthusiasm | to the whole. Ontario will need | every foot of land to blossom and | produce if we are to : and power to the Canadians fighting | tor our freedom in the trenches in| Flanders and France . Let every! body help. HASTEN DAYLIGHT SAVING. As March goes on, the still more! marked increase In the number of hoy and minutes of daylight in} tach twenty-four hours furnishes a strong plea for the great common-| sense, national move toward effi- cienay and economy embodied in the Daylight-Saving proposition. The Daylight-Saving commiftee of i 3 a i the United States Chamber of Twn | RErFIER on =0md then the skies begin to leak, and rain brings forth the | Brass agiin; the winds must yell, the her job, With ¢8Wslip, rose and thingumbob, and joy is in the hearts of men. merce urges wpon that natiti's legislators fifty<two reasons why the United States should adopt a plan which England, France, Germany, Austria-Hungary, Italy, Denmark, Sweden, Holland and Portugal have tried and found greatly to their ad- vantage. >t The general arguments for moving the clock ahead an hour from April to October--ithe saving of artificial light, the providing of an extra after- noon recreation hour, the tonic ef fect upon workers during the out- of-door season--are now doubly re- inforced by the urgent need of ex- pediting work in shipyards, muni- tion plants and other war industries by means of every possible increase in the efficiency, cheerfulness and enduring power of labor. For the conservation of fuel, day- light-saving can point to a record of concrete figures. During the sum mer of 1816 Great Britain set iia clocks ahead an hour and saved 300,000 tons of coal. Frauce hy the same means, is sald to have saved '$10,000,000 worth of coal and light. By saving a yearly average of 150 hours of daylight Canada could save probably 100,000 tons of coal that would otherwise be consumed for gas and electric lighting. A Daylight-Saving Bill should be promptly passed at the eoming ses- sion of Parliament, and its provi- sions put into effect next month. It Is time Canada joined the daylight savers. 4 o {the s | country. jary is | hension give strength! ® This grand old--and emphasize the old--winter is certainly dying veryj- PUBLIC OPINON | Hydro Power Possibilities. {Turontg T ) Adam "Bock's des 706,000 horse-power ergy at Chippawa dream of estah and Al would give old ; west, a source of 1.: supply of Hydra er the product nea tons of coal per annu h.p. That would equal 16,000,000 Peace Talk. {Boston Tra For thedast fortn and much time have the United State in ana thoughts of 'a political peace" which would soon end the war without fur- ther bloodshed. It would be a "peace without victory" for every- body, outside of Germany, because it would be a peace mdde in Germany, by Germany, for Germany He Diin't All Come Back. ¢Oriljia Packet) The New York Tribune quotes the fact that Major J. I. Hartt lost 36 pounds overseas as an evidence o rious' Jack of food in the ole Dur effeenied contempor laboring under an appre- Major Hartt's loss of flesh was due to hard work, and not to starvation He sures the Packet he feels better being rid of the surplus avo and would glad- ly loge some more in his country's service--or anywhere else! The Diplomacy (Buffalo '¥ 1e United State ceptional privileges to ( ing vessels without first obtaining a promise of reciprocal privileges for Americans from Canada and New- foundland. Tt evidently is trying to see wheather this good-will diplomacy will not bring the desired results better than hard bargaining. The Canadians will be ill appreciative of the new international spirit if it does not. of Good Will, anting ex- Napoleon on Hohenzollerns, (N Age) Napoleon was a master of flaming sentenpes as well as of the science of war. This sentiment, uttered at St. Helena, and quoted. by James M. Beck in an article on the war, might y echoed by the Allies ade the mistake of my when I had the opportuni that I did not remove the Hoh zollerns from the thro [ Prussia. As long as this house rns and un- til the red cap of liber is erected in Germany there will no peace in Europe." be Main Thing Just Now. CTaromt tir) It is not democracy, but autocracy, that has brought the world to the verge of ruin. There is overwhelm- ing evidence that autocracy '"is not safe far the world." That is the main. thing just "sow Any doubt that anyone inay feel as 'te whether the world will be safe under demio- craey can be put aside for future consideration--uniess, course, in the case of those who prefer auto- cracy, and do not consider it a bad thing at all that a small ruling clsas with a large army should govern each country, big nations erush small of Hm A wb As i 3 » ones, and the count anadian fish- | y with J dhe greatest forces dominate the rest {There seem to be many scattered { here and there who wants the war fo end without reforming 'the condi- tions that caused it . " CANADA TO REBUILD VIMY | Secours National Obtains Privilege of Organizing Work. The Secours National which works {hand in hand. with the French Red) Cross has accepted gratefully the re- { sponsibility of creating a new Vimy {on the site of the present ruins. There are two splendid sides to this { work. The first is that it gives Can- ada an opportunity to eregt a noble and permanent memorial. to the gal- lant Canadian soldiers who made | world history in this section of the | fighting lines. Everyone who has had a friend or relative in the en- | gagements that filled our newspapers {last April will be proud to assist in i the rebuilding of Vimy. : | But the humanitarian aspect is leven more appealing, for it must be |obvious that the refugees from the {town of Vimy are as destitute as it lis possible for a people to be. It is | got an exaggeration to say that Vimy {herself is.prostrate, exhausted and | sorely stricken, but only needs a lit- le material assistance to demonstrate the unconquerable spirit that: is | France and Freedom as the world has ieome to know it | Ontario will perform this new duty { with sympathetic intelligence and the labor of love will make permanent lan' appealling memorial such as the | heroes who have died might have de- | sired were any monument to be erect- {ed to them Coalfields In Spitzbergen, i The exploitation of Spitzbengen's | coal deposits has continued during the war. A new company has been formed in Sweden and its plans, as described in a recent Consular report from Stockholm, contemplate an eventual output of 1,000,000 toms. It is proposed 'te build a railway 50 miles long from the company's prop- erty, Sveagruvorna, to the . western coast, where a harbor can ..be made from which coal can be shipped eight months in the year, instead of two, as at present.--Scientifie American: Held On To The Ment. : The serving maid was. awkward and the joint fell on the floor with a sickening thud. The young mistress was upset, and shrieked: "Now, we've lost our dinner." The maid alone kept her heads | and the beef. Like oil on troubled waters came the calm reply: "Indeed, then, - an' ye mum, I've got me foot on it." Only Hobson's Choice, London Passing Show Porter-- There's only 'two hotels, sorr. Is it Murphy's or O'Neil's you're wantin'? x Vieitor-- Porter--Bedad, sorr, 1' can't say! 1f ye sthop at one ye'll be wishin' ye'd sthopped at tite other! aa ne Left Standing. n «Mrs. De Style got a shock to-day." "Shoot." "She got on a dur: followed by a nurse-maid carrying her baby, somebody gave: the seat.' nursemaid a meen Talkative women are usually open- ed faced. Rippling hard to beat. M4 winds that roar By GENE THE WESTERN WIND The wind is screeching past my hut, and goes kerwhooping down the street; "Tut, tut!" when I am lifted off my feet; when I, by its unholy power, am rolled along for half an hour, much like a bughouse barrel of flour--the Kansas wind is The air is full of flying hats, and sign- boards torn from marts of trade, and parasols and hens and cats, and language more or less decayed; ah, louder yét the west wind roars, and hears off trees and stable doors; and here and there a grindstone soars, and here and there an ax or spade. in the blast, and wateh the dizzy world aswing; I see dead cows go flying past, and in my glee I dance and sing; for ripping winds that lite the town, and shake it thrice, then jolt it dowm, have always had a fair re- nown as being harbingers of spring. THINGS THAT NEVER HAPPEN Rhymes indignantly 1 dry, I stand, exulting, First come the and shriek, and blow our whiskers rain must sob before gpring's fairly on --WALT MASON. BYRNES THIS STRIKES 'ME TERRIBLY FUNNY! THE SCAL 8 RAZO hard, : OFF THAT FISH WITH, CLEANING eS "HA! HAHA! § V Which is best? | and} 3 . Style Headquarters for Men and Boys ~~ BIBBYS SUITS $25.00. $20.00 SEE BIBBYS BELMONT Sizes 35 to 42. SEE BIBBYS SINTON SUITS Sizes 34 to 42. Dress Parade is an every day event to men who wear our Society Brand clothes. Whether at work por at play, their inbuilt style commands attention. SEE BIBBYS BELVIDERE SUITS Sizes 36 to 40. $27.50. ' SEE BIBBYS YOUNG MEN'S FIRST LONG PANT SUITS The Collegiate Sizes 33 to 39. $16.50. 'New Spring Overcoats. are Ready haven't, |'2 ba | 1 ao. = A PETERLORO (F., W. Cdoke, Loenl Agent) YOU'LL MAKE NO MISTAKE By placing your order enrly for store or house awnings and curtains. Supplies and help are scarce and prices will be higher. ' J. J. Turner & Sons, Limited. Awning, Flag and Waterproot Goods Manufactdrers, ONTARIO, Tent, and CHOOSE PURE AIDS. Take care of your complexion-- uh your complexion will take care of you. CHOOSE CREME ELCAYA THE PURE, DAINTY, TOILET CREAM THAT HAS STOOD THE TEST FOR YEARS. ""Makes the skin like velvet" SEND 10c FOR LARGE SAMPLE: JAMES C. CRANE, ei 104 FULTON STREET, NEW YORK Mask Off the Bolsheviki. "It is probably known that the counter revolution in Russia, which helped to the downfall of Kerensky, was inspired by Germans; still, not many understand how many Germans took part in it," declares the Wolna Polsha, a New York Polish paper that has excellent sources of information, "Not only that the leader of this movement' received money from the German Government, but, in fact, he is a Prussian agent, It is known that not only he, but the majority of his comrades, are German Jews. "A Petrograd correspondent who investigated the past of every mem- ber of the present Russian Govern- ment (Bolsheviki) was convinced that the Russian names of thoge men were pseudonyms only "For example, the real name of the premier is not Lenine, but Zeberblum. "The ex-Secretary of Agriculture, Tabernow's name is Feldman. "The notorious Parvus, who was the mediator between Lenine and the Prussian Government, is Helbarb. "His confidant, who calls himsell Gangcki, possesses the real name of Finsterberg. "The other Lenine camerades who took part in this counter-revolution, calling themselves Zinovieff, Kamye- neff,, Goreff, Matzkersky, Martow Suchanoff and Zagorsky, are nobody else but Applebaum, Zederbaum, Ros- enfeld, Goldman, Goldberg, Hinmer and Krachman. "It is sufficient to examine their es to discover the German rube. 'The _counter-revolution: which was 'Feonsummated fully by the Russian { mation, desiring tr : . 1 liberty, presents it- self 'as a ruse organized in Prussian 'istyle. The Prussians have always 'used such means for centuries in or- der to conquer nations which t detested. The bes of used "ruse, employing intrigue and their object. © "The present war gives ns enough 'Isimilar examples of the detestable ways used by Germans. With the old of treason and fooling they try to conquer the whole world. Only a 100! cotild believe In the smallest pro- Midge from Berlin, untif the Hohen- reign, supported by treason 'and brutal force, shall be totally " ~ James Foster, who has been in the moving picture business in Napance for the past number of years, has t proof is Poland.' { There, where they were unable to win | 'the war in an honorable way, they as well in order to obtain' 'Sol Wonderland to George Tustin | Taron y : Carpenter and Builder W. R. BILLENNESS Specializing Store Fronts and Fit- tings, Remodelling Buildings of all . kinds, ESTIMATES 1 EXPERIENCE Address, 272 University Ave. » PUT CREAM IN NOSE AND STOP CATARRH Tells How To Open Clog, trils and Nos- End Head-Colds. ng RY RY Stafford's Annihilator For Removing Ink From, paper, wood, white colored 'materials. 20¢ Box, DR. CHOWN'S DRUG STORE 185 Princess St. or Phone 348 You feel fine in a few moments, Your cold in head or catarrh will be gone, Your clogged nostrils will open. The air passages of your head will clear and you can breathe freely. No more dullness, headache; no hawking, snuffling, mucous dis- charges or dryness; no struggling for breath at night. Tell your druggist you want a small bottle of Ely's Cream Balm. Apply a little of this fragrant, "an- tiseptic cream in your nostrils, let it penetrate through every air passage of the head; and relief comes instantly. It is just what every cold and ca- tarrh sufferer needs. + Don't stay stuffed-up and miserable.§ UE ---------------------------------------- Bissell Carpet Sweep- ers Made Over New. All Repair Work Done. 301 Barrie St. Ph.1270 BRITISH GHREAT COWED HUNS. Two Aviators Sentenced to Prison Are Liberated. Loudon, March 14-%4t was offi- cially announced last night that the German Government had released 'from special imprisonment the Brit- ish lieutenants, Scholtz and Wookey, the two airmen who some time ago were given prison sentences for dis- tributang propaganda in Germany by dropping printed matter from air- planes over German territory The release was due to a threat by the British (Government to take reprisals unless the airmen ceased to be sub- jected to unusually harsh treatment. | It és understood that the British Government hag selected two Ger- ! man afrmen of "high family' who | were to have been imprisoned under | kpecial conditions immediately as q reprisal. Stolen sweets are often hard CANNED VEGETABLES Tomatoes, por tie ... Corn, per re aaa Standard Peas, per tin Early June Peas, Lima Beans, per tin Spinach, per tin Suceotash, per tin Asparagus, per tin .. oe Jas. REDDEN & Co. Phones 20 and 990. soothe and heal the} swollen, inflamed mucous membrane, to di 5 ¥ gest WATCH YOUR FURNACE. ECONOMIZE IN , COAL DO NOT 'WASTE CRAWFORD Foot of Queen St. Phone 9. dh dh dh dh ha Ah a hahha hh A

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