Ontario Community Newspapers

Daily British Whig (1850), 29 May 1920, p. 6

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SATURDAY, MAY, 29, 1930. THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG OA A Hil of people who are ready to make! oath to the fact that they would feel | | infinitely better han they do now if | they bad a little kidney trouble. languages, Jhad come tobe régar ded as a "pro | function, and Ontario; in he |BIBBY'S °o Style Headquarters-- For Men's and Young Men's Clothing For If you see it in our advertisement 'we have it in our store. GENUINE : "Clothing Values We absolutely refuse to let Semi-Weekly by wi 1 PUBLISHING Vabliswedt aii THES KITS Cu, o J. 6. Elllott . man A. Gulla We are right here with the goods. anyone undersell us. eg Notwithstanding that many stores are of- fering Special Discounts, some pretending to be real philanthropists, some claiming FAMOUS QUOTATIONS AND THEIR ORIGIN THE DEMON RUM. Now. that' the prohibitionists have just won their greatest victory of all ages in making the United States of America "dry') it is of interest to note what some great men of the past have had to say on the subject of alcoholic drinks. n the "Iliad," Homer (Greek 1,- B.C.) remarks: "Inflaming wine, mankind." Solomon says,. in the Bible: "Wine is a mocker; strong drink is raging*** Look not thou upon the wine when it is red, when it giveth color in the cup; at the last it biteth like a serpent and stingeth like an adder." | Pythagoras (Greek 540-500 B.C.) founder of the practical school of philosophy, says: "Drunkenness is an identical with ruin." Shakespeare, in "Othello" says: "0 thou invisible spirit of wine, H thou hast no name to be known by, Let us call thee devil." Robert Hall, (English 1764-1831) | says: "Call things by their right names. Glass of brandy and water! That is the current but not the appropriate name; ask for a glags of liquid fire and distilled damnation." McDonald Clarke (1792-1842) calls the saloon, "The horrible light- Rouse of hell." WHEN BABY IS SICK When the baby . sick--when he Is cross and peevish; cries a great deal and is a constant worry to the | mother--he needs Baby's Own Tab- | lets." 'The Tablets are an ideal medi- cine for little ones. They are a gen- + tle but thorough laxative which reg- ulate the bowels, sweeten the stomach, break up colds and simple fevers and make teething easy. Concerning them Mrs. Phillippe | Ne r- Payen, St. Flavien, Que., writes: | "Baby's Own Tablets have been al wonderful help to me in the case of | my baby and I can strongly recom- | mend them to other mothers.' The | Tablets are sold by medicine dealers | or by mail at 25 cents a box trom | The Dr. Williams Medicine Co., | Brockville; Ont. % | Se So] | | SYDENHAM,CONDENSARY. they need the money, some having acquired the habit, in face of all this fuss and camou-° | pribting aides' Tn flage, we say look around before you come here. Seeing is believing. And then we The circulation of THE BRITISH WHIG is authenticated by the ABC . ' Audit Bureau of Circulations. say if we can't beat the duff out of them for mr ------------------ 00 real values, with our strictly Cash and One- pernicious to Price system, then we won't take your money. Is it so that really the high cost of living is only the high cost of laxur- fess? | SEE BIBBY'S $35.00 GREY HALIFAX TWEED SUITS SEE BIBBY'S SEE BIBBY'S $45.00 expression $35.00 ALL WOOL GREY BLUE SERGE SUITS WORSTED SUITS ' SEE BIBBY'S $35.00 FANCY CHEVIOT SUITS SEE BIBBY'S $8.50 TROUSERS Cuffed plain bottoms; nobby greys, neat stripes, splendidly tailored, smart styles. SEE BIBBY'S $45.00 BLUE SUITS or Genuine Indigo, imported Blue Worsteds and Cheviots. Are husbands henpecked? We dare Now models, newest color. 'not offer an answer that is audible. _ Lét every man answer for himself. mgs and designs. soon as profiteers hear of over- uction, look out for reductions that years of govermental work could not bring about. SEE BIBBY'S $25.00 MEN'S AND YOUNG MEN'S SUITS. i A forecaster says June will be a rainy month. Real moist, he says. Thank goodness the hose can be still képt on the shelf. 1 E = EE ---------- trans GARDEN IMPLEMENTS ==Hand Cultivators. ~=Wheel Cultivator and Seeders. ~--Fleld, Garden and Ladies' Hoes. ~Sets of Garden Tools. ~Ladies' Spading Forks. BASIC SLAG FERTILIZE .. --Steele Brigas Seeds. Good assortment ab lowest prices --Deliveries te any part of elty, BUNT'S E King St. Phone 388 Colorite Colors Old and New| Straw Hats ~Easily applied. ==Dries quickly. --(iives a permanent color. ~All colors. 30c Bottle --_-- PURE MAPLE SYRUP PURE MAPLE SUGAR With the real old- fashioned ma ple flavor. . REDDEN & Co. Phones 20 and 990 EET a] Ar Ae F------ DC rr -------- DAVID SCOTT Plumber PFlambiag and Gas Werk speetal. . All werk Sesraateed. 148 Froautenae street. Bryan is to bob up again in San * Francisco at the Democratic conyen- They But the lights will fade as he orates. He is known. A moderate tariff policy! That sounds good and should let a great y of Canadians walk under the same banner. It is sane business. » tn Obregon does not want to be pre- "sident of Mexico. He looks over the records of Diaz, Huerta, Madero and Carranza and. says, "No, thanks." About Fifty People Will Be Employ- | ed by Bowes Co. The fact that a new milk conden- | sary has been established by the | Bowes Company, of Toronto, in | Sydenham means a great deal for the village. Many workmen are engaged ! in erecting one of the most up-to- | date condensgries in the Dominion. Had the company searched the whole province they could not have secured | a better location than they have at | Sydenham. On one side of the build- | ing they have the main line of the | Canadian Northern Railroad, while on the other side they have abund- | ancé of fresh water. The building is of brick and con- crete blocks. For.some months there | were one hundred men at the work, | but this number gradually decreased | | while the work had adyanced until'| at the present time there are about | titty. | Pree It is stated that if everything goe enn . . actor wi | FOR SALE along weil.the factory will be open | in a 1 dust couple of weeks. This industry | Milithey § 3 Straps, Boots, we, means a lot for Sydenham, as it is | expected that about fifty people wiil Highest paid for all kinds be employed in the condensary. ul Lah Fanta Manis phone 1237. 48 Princess Street, A SHAPIRO | CHOICE MEATS HARDWARE Yes, sir, Dikbioge , pice. sold in Kingston for 26¢ ag. Hogs ate theui. But there aré no hogs now- adays either in the human or animal | kingdom! Cut down on non-essentials. Get down to hard pan. 'Work hard, save, buy thrift stamps and some day our iidten can have the comforts we enjoyed before the war. Special For Saturday 200 ibs. Choice Stewing Beef 18e. to . per Ib, Chates Steak, Pork, Lamb and Choice Heddohesss, Sausage «20e. per In, Quantity of Chole Corned Beef, QUICK'S WESTERN MEAT TRAINING OF TEACHERS. "In dealing *with the situation re- lative to the Faculty of Education, ot which the University Schools are ar integral part, it might reasonably be urged that any proposed change should not be made until the ques- tion has been reviewed from every angle," remarks the Toronto Globe, "If removed to any other city in the province, could the Faculty be given the facilities that exist at the Uni versity Schools, the university itself, and all the splendid institutions and organizations with which it is affili- ated and associated, and which are situated so close to one another? There is a continuity of inspiration in the present systeqn, and there are Jee! This is A few commodity on os he market just now. And it is costly, LR 100. Three months back we would have given anything to have gotten rid of it. Peculiar people, are we "mot? 112 CLERGY STREET Phone 2011. FAGE SIX THE BRITISH WHIG, tmission on iuorstur \ 87th YEAR. mat at 4 nd science would ex-|per university 4 cel in ofher at nge for which a tech- | was simply adopting a pract ige which nical school would fit them. Every | hed met with success in other demo- | I ha. hoy or girl who enters high school is | crati ic and progressive _countries. | 1O00KS LIKE IT. t fo NM 7 | t . ft twa (€hicago Tribune) not fi ee r the ga Varghy. fay Sines he stand) ishr Mest o oe tne] Apparently it Is the purpose of the of them are only wasting eir time | Ontario Faculties of Educa t revolutionists in Ireland to reduce | | in continuing at the study of litera- 'movement for the professional tr ain-| the country to that aspect which led | {ture and science, when they mi ight {ing of teachers in university depart- ihe Irish soldier in one of the best | make better mechanics, farmers, mest ts, faculties and schools (all} 2 war stories, to inquire: 1 pom) ~-nurses-6r-stenographers. Yihres-hames are used) has grown | ong- ave: yer had home' Fraley ----% Perhaps the disséct ion of the Col- | very rapidly. According to recent in-| T Walking. ¢ legiate Institute four-year record in |formati ion given out by the United | T toes 10 ines Bre, press) o foo eisurely with eyes open | | matricul als on Fofk mayservea good | Stare Commissioner of Slusaion] oy shoulders erect, an understand- | purpose if the conditions are studiell'| there are now 250 universities an ing companion beside one, is to have | out, and a list of those who failed tj | colleges in the United States which |silence or speech as the mood dic-| pass would have to be secured. It |train teachers for public and ign) ples. Some there are, averse to | | : . % talking themselves, who like to listen | jis not fair to say that because the | school teaching. All the newer uni- | as they walk. With chore phir | Collegiate Institute has failed to jrofeities in England (Manchester, |. "" safety, however long" the | pass more than two-fifths of the |Liverpool, Sheffield, Birmingham, | stretch may be. And the end brings | pupils in the matriculation tests, its | ete. ) do the same, and the University | sleep as a delicious concomitant to | staff are inefficient when it is well [of Oxford in co-operation with tha|leg-weariness. a Sette | known that there is a great deal of | English Board of Education (th The Worker's Duty. | neglect and idleness on the part of [central authority) has recently un- (London Free Press) : many pupils whose fond parents are | dertaken to establish a department off Tae workes upon his part' must | too easy with their sons and daugh- education for the training of ele- nan the Mea that Juantiy | ters, and do not see that they study {mentary and secondary teachers | sooner or latér. The fact might be as school lads and lasses did years |quite similar in its general aim and | proved over and over again in the | 293 | ago, when amusements were far the scope of its work to the Faculties experience ou everybody's life that | fewer @ s {0- ; where ere*is abundance there is | : SUBSCRIPTION ie than they are to-day cori tons pisses ity. and happiness. It is, | A AEE 4 ape a { therefore, the duty of the worker, | 1 Sgn y ar, PE CORNER. STONES AND BABIES. |. .ont address. by the director of!in "Whatever SPE ro, not to bi Br git our, Bs ir rin The most futeresting corner of | training in Oxford op the subject, | limit production, but rather to en-| Editio newspaper for those who have a real | "The Universities and the Training | courage it. Nothing would make | gas yor: h oy m all, fash coin taste for news is the section devoted | ,¢ maachers': labor so cheap as famine. hr fo, [United Siate io' i 130 | to births, marriages and deaths, and "We shall also, I think, acknow- | eg | of these by far the most interesting ledge the board's wisdom when it ES To) Vou Suny Bia Montreal. 1 birth column. The reason is obvi- confines itself to general principles | ¥ Thompson, a. umsden Bldg. ous; for that is God's way of sweet- land look to the universities to in- | EES Nort gum. 3 3 Hen Ave New York | ening and cleansing the world. What |itiate and devise. The first condition | 4 ort 3 Ast'n Bldg. Chicago |, baby cannot do cannot be done. [of bien 2itigedey in any Sucaiionsl © Letters t & ublished ; . | scheme is, I am sure, that it & be | only are oA Ramo' of the We bave spent. some years now the creation of those who work it." | talking about the war; would it not We quote again: 'That the edu-| of "he best Job | be better if we talked about babies? cation of teachers is a task for which Cana Listen: During the years 1809 to |the universities are peculiarly fitted 1815 everybody in England was tdik- |few will contest. No other institu- ing about war. Yet in those years |tlons could do the work so well, if | what a host of heroes were born! In they could do it at all. Nowhere 1809 Gladstone w b in Li | could we find conditions so well suit- | e was worn In "Ver | od to counteract by anticipation the | pool, Tennyson in Sqmersby, Oliver {narrowing influence of a teacher's "2A good motto: Do mot let your | Wendell Holmes in Massachuetts, {lite as in the universities, where | outgo exceed your income. [Charles Darwin in Shrewsbury, and |learning and research are pursued 8 | Abe Lincoln In Old Kentucky. In |for thelr own sakes where any teu- -- f i i i y ialism is coun- 2 [the same year Chopin saw the light |dency to narrow spec How 'would it do to . tax yents? lof d in W da Mend & teracted by the simultaneous study of They have reached luxurious figures. |©0! day in Warsaw and Mendelssohn RS ee © | in Hamb: In 1813 the child every important branch; where stu { mburg. In © the children | ents congregate of every kind and of Blantyre ran home to tell that|ciags, destined for~every variety of there was a new baby at Neil Living- |career; and where this universality stone's store. But at the store there |of type finds a parallel in a many- ---------- was no such excitement. Through |sided social life. « Ho! ho! the lettuce and radishes | the long spring evenings half a dozew |" 'It may not be irfelevant to sug- are up. We see cheap vegetables| men talked in that odorous store gas. that In mskise tui fash of edu. cating teachers their own e uni- ahead of us. about how the war was going, about versities are merely returning to Dravt t do how it fared with Nell Livingstone's | their original function of producing Even Sir Henry Drayton canno two brothers who were fighting with | masters, men qualified to teach the as Joshua Higa Numan things and | ;6 1r0n Duke, about the chances of RYLS they have gudied p ~ prices to stand still. : '"The universities are of course as A uitiiate Victory ovey Napdleon. Bat much concerned with the academic as Read the Whig ads, and--well, it | 20 One thought of the baby; that is, | with the professional training of the | big profits to the readers |nC One but his mother. And yet the'|teacher, and the calls upon them are i Pay hig pe Fiszestions birth of David Livingstone was of |likely to increase as the old type of Mig ac; upon us : profounder influence to the world Sper training college tends to dis- Ahan the birth of Napoleon Bona- "That the professional as well as parte. The plain fact is that while [the academic education of teachers we think God-manages the world by |should be carried on in the universi- big battalions abroad, all the while Ho ae A Sear Ae same : ra . He does it by beautiful babies at essentially post graduation work. home. And sometimes we find num- |The theoretical side of it demands bers of men forever talking about [teaching of university standard. The "the Empire" who would advance [Only possible alternative is to Basign training to colleges devote ox- its interests much more if they would clusively to the@purpose. But such mind their "own little bit of empire [specialized institutions inevitably de- at home," while their wives got the |velop an atmosphere which influences dinner. For any future the Empire | both students and teachers in, just has is bound up in the babies. It 00 giestion uch it is most im- seems strange, then, that so few peo- |" mn question that arises is: Was ple are interdsted In babies. But it|ns Minister of Education well -ad- has always been so. There never is|yieq when he decided to cut out the room for a baby; there wasn't any faculties and do the work in the room when Jésus was born. normal colleges--a retrograde step The church has dome. much to that is demonstrated by reading the dignify the advent of the baby and ts | jaws of 'educationists all over' the throw a charm around young life.| gongs Queen's and its friends, as That #8 why there is so much signifi- Toronto. University is doing, should cance in the laying of two corner-fgy,w the fallacy of the contentions stones this week in this Christian | os 4ne minister's advisors -in the community--a corner-stone of a day issue at hand. * school and -a 'corner-stone of a Sun- day school. These things mean more than if a town hall and court house, jail and asylum had all been planned PUBLIC OPINION in a single houm For whether we like it or not, the ' future lies with the babies, and as the Lucky Sometimes. twig is bent the tree will grow. Bet- (Philadelphia Record) ter schools and better Sunday schools he Ehiveriut Se sole its ~~this way lies the only hopeful sign the poet: 'It Is not always May!" { of the future world. Let us take care - of the babies of to-day, they are the One uty Untaged, - . (Woodstock Sentinel-Review) leaders of tomorow, However some luxuries have es caped. Pérhaps the budget makers did not knoW the luzury to tired feet of wearing old shoes. aii. What Really Hurts. (New Orleans States) The Baltimore American says the profiteers are certain to go to hell. Maybe so, but we would be greatly obliged to them if they were to stop giving us hell before they go. Chestnut Coke The Ideal Fuel for KITCHEN RANGES and The stick of sandy that rejoiced one's heart in chifdhood days and |. "which cost one copper, is now worth eleven cents. And the kind old gentleman is not handing many of m out to the school children. Can't. Scare Them. (New Orleans States) Somebody says that the constant regular or irregular use of beverages | -------- ct tts et containing alcohol will sooner or lat- Dr. J. H. Mullin of Hamilton, was er make trouble for the kidneys.| elected as president of the Ontario But this will not frighten millions! Medical Associiation. DR. CHOWN'S DRUG STORE PHONE 843 SCHOOL EFFICIERCY TEST. 'Should mere examination results i be tho only efficiency test of = ol? According to Mayor Nickle, ' Kingston public schools last year seventy-six per cent. of the who tried the high school en- ce examination, while of the Col- te Institite pupils who tried the ity matriculatioft only thirty- per cent. passed. But just as a cannot make good bread with F flour, so also & teacher cannot 4 scholar out of a dull lad or] of qne whose capacity for schol- a aim onte is very Timited. ht the Kingston Collegiate In- sides that of teaching, notably, in the figures rather prove that par- | training for the medical protession, are sending children on to the where ry school in.an effort to ge! into the university when they t titted for higher education? the other three-eighths who 16 pass the mafriculition ex- working advantages that appeal very strongly to all who consider the question carefully." Twelve years ago the Ontario Gov- ernment abandoned the policy. of training candidates for the higher teachers' certificates in-a separate | "normal college" and assigned this | work to U niversity Faculties of Edu- mended itself in the training of the | members of other professions be- the University Fadulty of Medicine had supplanted almost en- tirely the independent medical col- lege. i In England, Scotland and the Un- {ited States the training of teachers cation. This policy had already com- | OPTIMIS Are you sad and weary hearted, are you full Come and see m prunes? cheer-up 'tunes. Do row? 1 have griefs, morrow; hear my bl more weeping than seen the reaping dotie by other men; I've had spuds and hoped to cook them, greens | wished to eat; but ff came and took them, in the name of Pete. the sh I have an aunt even yet I miss her our tears bring ham when we're stricken Rhymes bl « of Iyré get started, hear my hink you've cornered sor- but I'm banking on to- | 1 have done a lot 1 have sown and | you as well; ithesome yell I'll do again; 80 stately that she beat Lenore; 'Hi greatly, but I keep no more. For | RO bacon, bring no fodder in; nd forsaken, it is best to grin. | Are you beatédw down and broken, finding life too hard? cornfed bard. Single sorrows soon are doub { weep and sigh; nothing scares oft Old Man Trouble | like a courage high. ~WALT MASON. Come and hear a glad word spok by a --Spring Lamb. --Spare Ribs. --Tenderloins. --Pork Sausages. Choice Western Beef Daniel Hogan if you 5 i Mr. | heme of his daughter, Mrs. Dan Gray, Roblin, ' place at Harlowe on Tuesday. \ Mitchell 'passed away ait the 'on Sunday. Burial took 185 PRINCESS STREM? FOR SALE Two houses, barn and large lot. $1,500 for quick sale. W. H. GODWIN & SON and - Phone 424 Real | SMALL HEAT=RS Quick heat; clean; no clinkers; economical Sold only by :-- Crawford - Foot of Queen St. Phone 9,

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