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The Clinton News Record, 1921-11-24, Page 8BOMBAY EXTENDS TO HER ROYAL GUEST AN . ENTHUSIASTIC RECEPTION Prince of Wales Received With ;a Tumultuous Demonstra- tion Unprecedented in the History of Bombay --Bear- ing and Manner of Heir to the Throne Create Best Impression. A doepateb from London says:— 'Reuter's correspondent with the prince of Wales, in a long detailed despatch, describes the reception of the Prince by the populace of Bombay when he landed and during the four mile circuitous procession through. the City, ` The eplcndid ittilitdi bo lege at':.:various points along the route • touched the fringe of the native bezoar, where there was tumultous s enthusiasm unprecedented in the his- tory of Bombay. The route of the procession was lined with Br:'trs'h and Indian troops. A public holiday had been .declared and all -the inhabitants closed their shops and lined into the streets to greet the Prince, whose manner and bearing made a great impression. The correspondent adds that, aI- though the political atmosphere in Bombay is rather tense, the•teer of the Prince is considered to have open- ed with splendid promise. • The Bombay c'orrespondett, of The London Times says the non-co-oper•- ationists had made the utmost efforts to render the boycott of the Prince of Wales' visit effective; but 'the' only result was an overwhelming and eum'nultuous reception, passing all pos- sible expectations. Experts say it will be a severe blow 'to Gandhi end his party of discontent, but the correspondent refrains from prediction. At the moment of the. demonstration Ganhi himself was somewhere in Bombay, but is report- ed to have been assisting at ;'afarci- cal bonfire of imported clothing." His Royal Highness the Prince of Wales will have a strenuous time during his four months' stay in India, beginning With Bombay, where the battle -cruiser Renown, on which he sailed from England on October 27, • arrived on .Nov. 16, ' He was greet- ed by Lord Reading, the Viceroy, and the rulir.,g Princes on the 'staff of his Royal Highness. The initial cere- mony upon his landing at the Gate- way of India, on the Bander, which was built to commemorate the climber visit of the Ring and Queen, was the RISE IN QUOTATION OF POUND STERLING Due to Improvement in Great Britain's Foreign Trade Balance. A despatch from New York saysi— British exchange, as reported by the pound sterling, rose to a fraction over $4 for demand bills in this market on aeefae Thursday. This is the highest quota - 'ion in over six months and equals a Gain of ;;ix cents from the low quo- ' ation of the week. The rise again -was associated with developments at the Armament Con- .fererrce in Washington, as well as inerovement •in Great Britain's for- eign trade. balance. ' ...French and other leading C.ontin- /Meal .reunittances-also strengthened, an:3 German marks; which recently reached their most acute stage of de - Moralization, were relatively firm. lj presentation of, an address by the 13'ombay municipality. A state drive through the city to Government House at Malabar Point was followed in this evening by a reception, preceded by a quiet dinner. On Thursday morn- ing the Prince held a durime of the ruling Princes. A dinner and ball at G'overhnent liaise at night concluded the Prince's initial visit in Bombay, and shortly after midnight he left for Poona, • After a public welcome to the Prince in Poona his Royal Highness will unveil the Mahratta War Mem- orial. He will attend the races in the afternoon, and will then return to Bombay. Among his engagements in Bombay will be his attendance at the quadrangular cricket match (so called; from the competition of European, Parsee, Mohammedan and Hindu elevens), and the sports tournament of the great'Bombay•Maidan. The Prince will leave Bombay on the night of Nov. 22 for Baroda, which' last received a visit from, the then Prince of Wales in 1875. After some formal engagements in Baroda the Prince will go into the country and have some black -buck shooting. He will then proceed t'o Udaiper, whose venerable Maharaja is considered the leading ruler in Rajputana, on••account both of his legendary descent from the semi -divine Rama and the great traditions of chivalry associated' with the ruling house.: .Through all the generations, of Mogul .domination it was the only ruling Rajput family which gave 'no daughter in marriage to dny member of the Mohammedan Imperial dynasty. ' The Prince will spend a couple of days in the valleys not far from the palace of the Maharaja, shooting leo- pards and possibly some other big game. ' The Prince's visit to. Patha, the youngest of the British Provinces, will be of historic interest, as it will be the first time that a member of the Royal house will be the guest of an Indian Governor, in the person of Lord Sinha. There will be a clurbar at Patna. Seven Miles of Eels Exported to New York A despatch from New York says:— Seven miles of eels, valued at $100,- 000, reached this city on Thursday from Quebec in three specially ,con'- structed barges, so arranged that water will flow in and out of the ves- sels at ell times, kcreping the squirm - era alive. Possibly in the stress of, other things the residents of this city have failed to note a dearth of•eels in the local market, Dealers assertthat-for a long time there has been a startling absence of eels' from the local fish stalls, and that to overcome the eel famine 200,000 of the finest kind of silver eels, from near the mouth of the St, Lawrence River. were ordered captured and forwarded here without regard to cost. University Spirit. "There's no use betting on' a uni- versity team. University boys always play to win." said a more or less pro- fessional "sportsman" apropos of the rugby gantes.played at the University of, Toronto stadium. This man has an insight into the spirit which is pro- duced by university athletics. Uni- versity boys play' herd, are glad to win, axe good losers, if they lose, and they do not resort to "shady" tricks. They are trained to be above that sort of tiring. Not the winning of the game, primarily, but good, clean sport is their objective. Awl what a vale- -able` asset • that spirit is to en indi- vidual! The people of Ontario are proud of their provincial mtiversuty, of its excellent teaching, of its :lac - cess in research, of its widespread extension service, and they. do' not forget that, at that university; young men and women are being trained to be citizens of..the highest order, int suspicious_and above suspicion. honest and upright, and that the training in sports and general athletics is help- ing to produce that type of citizen. Ulster Firmly Maisotsins • the Stand Taken A despatch from London says:— Ulster's reply to the latest British Government communication on the question of an Irish settlement was delivered'at Downing Street on Thus - day afternoon. It indicates that Ul- ster stands firm in the attitude elle has taken and will not submit to any- thing considered a violaticn of her rights. The 1911 census gives the Province of Alberta a population of 681,995, as compared with 374,663 in 19L1, an increase of 207,332, or 55.34 per cent. KINGDOM OF ARABS IN MESOPOTAMIA TO BE CON TRDLED BY URI AII A despatch from Paris says:- that freedom of religion and worship Herbert A. L. Fisher, member of the and "the equity ea commercial deal- Ootmcil of the League of Nations for ings with foreign countries". would be Great Britain, announced in Thr'irs- assured. The treaty, however, Mr. day's session of the council meeting Fisher said, will secure the control of here that Great Britain was preparing the foreign relations of- the Irak re - ,to negotiate et treaty with Prince Fei- gion to the British Government. sal, King of the Irak region of Meso- The Kingdom of Irak, which in- potamia, defining the relations .of the eludes virtually all bf Mesopotamia, British Government as mandatory is ono of the territories covered by power to the new kingdom. the class mandates which ate still to The treaty, he said, will dee based be approved by the League Council, on the principles announced 'by the and concerning which the United King himself in his accession speech, States Gbvermmen't recentljr notified during the course of which he said the council that it insist have a voice. 1 eovs:He aus. J tel. _ UP oN41t?, peao5rr S \ eRv Y, i/�PgFd._ , /� //f14-' tp,�� ftif /) a • Training Farmers. Out in British Columbia, in the Big Bar Creek region, there is at project under way with the hacking of the Government; that points to the solu- tion of a big part of the problem of the ex -soldier. Nearly a million dollars is to be spent in creating a farming training colony on a tract of 30,000 acres. Be - Letters s T h at Have Changed Th an g r ged a Nation. On one occasion Lord Wolseley prophesied that eventually the Chi- nese would rule the wom'hl. It looks flair tills prediction may be nearer the truth. In the past, ninp'(y per cent of the Chinese people were quite illiterate. There has, however, come an awaken - fore the 500 "first families" are ad- ing, and a desire for education arae de- mitted, houses .and schools Will be veloped. provided, free, with fuel, light .and One of the reasons for this sudden water. The necessary equipment will change is that the Chinese have adopt- be brought to the scene. from portable sawmills, truck's and tractors to live- stock. Each settler will be given six acres, a cow, thirty chickens and, two pigs. He will have a minimum salary of $60 a month end a commission. an the community sale of his produce. When a manhas become a full- ed a new phonetic alphabet. By means of thirty-nine signs, or letters, it is possible for them to write and ex- press anything which can be spoken in their own language. For thou sands of years there had been a way of writing Chinese, but it was such- a difficult way that only fledged, qualified farmer, as examinee, scholars attempted it. The old Chi - time determine, he will be assigned mese alphabet bad 43,000 signs, and it' an arable tract, independent of corn- is scarcely surprising that most Chin'a- ntunity control, on the route of the sten gave up all idea of learning to Grand Trunk •Pacific. • • • read and write. It sounds too good to be true. The Eventually China's ruling men set intending eoldderseftlerleaks for' the thettiselves the task of inventing a hitch in the plan. The hitch is that simple phonetic alphabet, such as most he must have a thousand dollars. That is a good deal of money for ,an ex - soldier. If he is able to scrape to- gether the sum, the plan seems to present large possibilities. There will venting an alphabet of thirty-nine let - be general curiosity as to the out- ters, which are not unlike shorthand. come, and success in British Columbia Misaionaries and teachers have under - is likely to mean a multiplicity of taken the teaching of reading and similar ventures in other places. The writing by means of this simplified agricultural settlement of Western method. The modern Chinaman is Canada has resulted in an amazing hungry for knowledge and education, development of the wheat belt. Tot end even old people are found to be the middle of September, 1021, 90,- anxious to learn to read and write. 000 000 bushels, of winch 85,000,000 have been shipped abroad, had cone to Montreal. By this time certain cone-Arcial superstitions about "Our Lady of the Snows" deserve extir- pation. • Incendiary Sentenced languages possess. The Chinese Board of Education, with the help of various foreign auth- orities on languages', succeeded in in- to 20 - 40 Year Term A despatch from New York says:— Raphael Boccagna, 41, a cobbler, of 3886 Third Ave.. The Bronx, convicted of first degree arson last week for having set a fire in the kitchen of his home July 6 last which endangered the lives of twenty-five families hi the house, leas sentenced in Bronx County Court to twenty to forty years in Sing Sing. "I regret," said Judge Louis D. Gibbs, "that the law does not permit me to send you to the electric chair or give you life." The•fire was dlecovered in time and no one was injured'. Maybe Mother Was. Lucy heard her mother and some callers discussing a neighbor's rug, She quietly slipped out of the room, sang the neighbor's door -bell, and asked to see the new rug, After looking at it for some time, she solemnly said, "Well, it doesn't make me sick." Admiralty Will Retire 280 Officers A despatch from London rays:—In connection with its policy of retrench- ment in administrative e.:pemlituree, the British admiralty has resolved to retire on pensio a eighty naval cap- tains and 200 co.nnranders early next year, according to the Evening News. These :etirentents would not Involve taking more ships out of commission, it was said, and if the Washington Conference agrees on the United The LeadingMarkets. I�es. Toronto Manitoba wheat—No. 1 . Northern, nage slightly greater then sixty per $$l.17%;i No, 2 Northern, $1.14%: No. cent., and, in a type of vessel of strict- , $1.03 /n. ly defensive character, As night even Manitoba oats -No, 2 CW, 51%c; desire to approximate that of the No. 3 CW 47e; extra No. 1 feed, 47c;greater navies," No. 1 feed, 45c; No. 2 feed, 42o. Baron Kate's statement was made Manitoba barley—No. 8 CW, 650; No. 4 CW, 60c. BARON KATO WANTS MORE TONNAGE THAN ALLOWED BY UNITED STATES PLAN A de;spatch from Washington that Japanese desired would Include saye:—Admiral Biiron Veto. head of the battleship Matsu, probably jue't Abe Japanese delegation to the arra, merit conference, announcedon Thurs- day that Japan would eel( medifice- idon of the United States naval tation program, which would permit Japan to maintain a "general tonnage slightly greater than sixty pee cent." commiseioned and that the type of defensive vessel referred to was e light cruiser Suitable for policing the waters of the Orient against photos and the like. The Mutsu Is a ship of seine 33,000 tone, armed with eight 10 -Inch rifles, of that of each of the other two She is comparable to the United States Maryland class and, according Japan would. -also aslc, Baron Kato to Secretary FTnghes' program, each. Said, for the right to main'tain' "a nation would retain het one ship in type of vessel of strictly defensive this class. Groat Britain has no bat- charaeter," with tonnage approximat- tlesbips of this type, If the Mutsu ing, that maintained by the other two is later addled to the ships Japan is to powers, retain, she will make the second 10- A statement issued by Baron Kato inch gun ship for Japan, and it was said;, assumed that if this was granted, the "Because •of liar geographical post- United States delegation would desire tion, Japan deems it only fair at the to retain the West Virginia, of similar present time that the other interested characteristics, to be launched next countries siloul•d agree that she should Saturday. maintain a proportion in general ton- Admiral Kato made his statement in 'the presence of al, Hanihara, the vice -Minister for Foreign Affairs, and several ether members of the 'Japan- ese delegation, He was then asked to define more cleerly what he meant in stating that "in a type of vessel cf at a conference with newspaper coo'- strictly defensive character sle might -respondents, but he would not give desare to approximate that of the details as to the modifications •his delegation, would submit, saying this was for the conference to discuss. It was assumed generally, however, that the "slightly greater" general tonnage defensive character. powers. • All the above, track, Bay porta. American corn—No. 2 yellow, 58c, Bay ports. Ontario oats—No. 2 white, 38 to 40c. Ontario wheat—No..2 Winter, per car lot. $1 to $1.05; No. 3 Winter, 97e to $1.02; No. 1 commercial, 900 to $1.01; No. 2 Spring, 93 to 98c; No. 3 Spring, nominal. Barley—No. 3 extra, test 47 lbs. or better, 53 to 56c, according to freights outside. Buckwheat—Noy 2, 60 to 65e. Rye—No. 2, 76e. Manitoba four—First pats., $7.30; second pate., $6.80, Termite. Ontario flour—$4.60, bulk, seaboard. Millfeed—Del. Montreal freight, bags included: Bran, per ton, $22; shorts, per ton, $24; good feed flour, $1.70 to $1.80. Baled Hay—Track, Toronto,' per ton No. 2, $22; mixed, $18.. Straw—Car lots, per ton, $12. Cheese—New, large, 19 to 19e4e; twins, 19% to 20e; triplets, 20% •to 21c. Old, large, 26 to 26c; 'twins, 26% to 26300; triplets, 26 to 27c; Stiltons, new, 23 to 24c. Butter --Fresh dairy, choice, 33 to 35e; creamery, prints, fresh, No. 1, 41 to 42c; No. 2, 39 to 40c; cooking, 22 to 24c. Dressed poultry—Spring chickens, 30 to 35c; roosters, 20 to' 25c; foy'l, 28c; ducklings, 30 to 36c; turkeys, 60 o GOc; geese, 27c, Live poultry—Spring chickens, 20 to 36c• roosters, 20 to 25c; fo 1, 26 to greater navies," and in reply, said he wanted to make perfectly clear• that the above reservation did not apply to capital ships but to other slips of LIMIT USE OF SUBS SAY BRITISH PARTY Base Opposition to Subrtners- ibles on Humanitarian Principles. A despatch from Washington says: Great Britain's antipathy to submarines as a naval weapon still loomed on Thursday as the outstand- ing point of disagreement between the British and United States points of. view in conneition with famere- stricted naval programs. The submarine question is being stressed beyond any other in unoffi- sial dis'crission in .conference circles, and views of .the 'two powers are so far apart that it seems likely extend- ed consideration must be given before a mutual agreement can be reached. In the British view, submarines should be abolished entirely, as an improper naval weapon. A wide range of subjects have been covered to sup- port that position. In the United States view, snbrnar- 28c; ducklings, 28 to 32c; turkeys, Ines, 45 to 50ci geese., 26 to 27c. properly peed, are as legitimate a naval weapon as_battleships. No 11[asgarme-23 to 26c. British argument yet presented has Eggs—No. 1 storage, 45 to 46c; se- shaken that conviction, so far as can lett storage, 61 'to 52c• new laid be told. , straights, 86 to 88c; new laid, in car- The British delegation apparently tons, 88 to 90c. Beans -Can. hand-picked, bushel., $4 to $4,25; primes. $3,50 to $3.75. Maple products—Syrup, per imp. gal., $2.60; per. 5 imp. gals., $2,85; maple sugar, lb., 19 to 22c. Honey=G0-80-llb. tine, 1411 to 15c States naval restriction program, perr lb.; b -2'/ -lb. tins, 16 to 17c per further reduction in the admiralty's personnel aro contenipltted. a Electric Ice Machines. There are now in operation through- out the Unitel States many central electric stations provided with. ice- bub -Is, good, $3:60 to $4; do, tom., $2.50 immediately both of these suggcs- mahing apparatus. The unused power to $3.50; feeders, good, 5100 lbs., $5 to tions. of the stations during the "light load" $5,50; do, fair, $4.60. to $5; stockers, The 90,000 -ton aggregate limitation sumunrer season is employed to run good, $4 to $4.50; do, fair, $3 to $4; proposed by the United States dele- compression motors for liquefying tan- milkers, $60 ,to $80; springers, $70 gation was derived from a study of mouia in the process of freezing arts• to $90; calves, choice, $10 to $11; do•, United States needs of the more than ficial ice-. red.., $8 to $10; do, cam., $3 to $7; 40,000 nautical miles of coastline to lambs, good, $3, r0 to $9; da conn., $5 The plan has boon especially sue- to $5.b0' sheep, choice, $4 to $4.50; .be protected and of the need of the cessful with small- plants supplying (IV '5'52; good, $3.60 to $4'' do, heavy and fleet in underwater craft. That being electric power and light for towns of bucks, $2 to $3; hogs, fed. and watered, the figure arrived at as necessary for less than five thousand inhabitants. $9; do, off ears. $9.60; do, f.o.b., $8.60; defensive purposes, incl• to round out In so cnsee the earning at the do, country points, $8.` 5.- _ the fleet, it was entirely agreeable to Montreal the United 'States that Great Britain Oats, Con. West. No. 2, 55% to fine; should keep the same tonnage. do, No. 3, 56 i1 to 51k. Flour, Man• United States naval officers wholly does not expect an agreement to aban- don submarines, There is nothing to indicate that it has presented or will present any such proposal in a formal way. Failing that, however. the Brit- ish will advance a project to limit the United States and Great Britain Ontario comb. honey, per doz., to probably 45,000 tots in submarines, 75 to $4.50. instead of the 0.0,000 tons each pro - Choice choicehey steers, $6 to $7; butcher posed by the United States. Coupled steers $6 to O.GO• do,good,, 5nmol to $6; do nrecl .$4 to , 4.50• dcoi, with the proposal will be a formal Y $ ' suggestion to limit the size of indi- teto $3.50;$6;butcher hws, ch, en' 'Mae" vidual submarines, perhaps to 260 to$ to $6; 'butcher cows, choice, $4 to $4.76; do, red., $3 to $4; canners tors. and cutters. $1.50 to ,$2.50; butcher The United States viewpoint rejects auxiliary ice -snaking app:r.ratua' equal Living in Austria is now 98 times the annual return on the whole plant as costly as in 1014 , for other purposes. i70w TEE NAVIES OF THC THREE ORES? SEA rowmas COMPARE To -DAY. .e>u`7' hot Yi., J Ai ^. i�P7LL6108... +. A Ce\IPAaTeON OP PRESENT NAVAL BUILDING PaOeo,uos. AD \VEEN TEE PRESENT nnILDINe PiOORAMS ARID COMPLETED. - Cinita-i' BRITAIN'. a*i,./ ur_. leaeieeeee s' Three comparisons of the naval strength of the greatest powers in the world, as they are to -day and as they will be if the present naval building plans ;are. completed, Note that any Britain would still stan:i out above the other powers, Sir Tan Hamilton warns us as to Japan's great efficiency Dried figs are, weight for weight, regarding armament. Note her position on the diagram. more eoutishne than bread. est difficulty. 1,14_111 lid 111.11I'r-- .1..._,...t.. 1. spring wheat pats., firsts, $7.40. Roll- d'isamree with the suggestion of the eel oats, bag 00 lbs.. $2,80 to $2.95. Bran, $22,2b. Shirts, $24 25. Hay, British that there is any inherent Ivo.'2, per ton, car Toto, $27 to $28. characteristic • in submarines that .Cheese, finest Easte'rns, 17% to 1.8c. makes them un'amenable to the rules Butter, choicest creamery, 40 to 41c, of civilized warfare. It is pointed Eggs selected, 50 to 52e. out that' $ the United States thrashed Med. ethers! $6; poem, $2 to $3.60; out that question with Germany be- cannere, $125; good veal calves, $:10; fore Carman disregard of the view that submarines could be centrolled brought the United States into the war. A battleship or cruiser could be guilty of just as grave violations of the requirements of humanity, even in war, it is argued, and lbs fact that submersibles have a quality of limited visibility does not deny them a place in legitimate warfare. Injection of Oxygen Enables Man to Soar A despatch from Paris says:— Flight to rarified altitudes, and even to the moon, is now possible for hu- man beings without being equipped with special breathing tanks, through a discovery by Dr. Bayeux, which has been communicated to the Pasteur In- stitntc. An infection of oxygen re- plaeas the artificial respiratory tanks hitherto in use. Dr. Bayeux has proved the feasibility of his discovery by its u•se in the Alps, where he as- cended 18,000 feet without thesli'ght- pail fed calves, $7 to $8; grassers, $2.60• Hogs, selects, $9.35. a-- . Hove Long Do You Sleep?. Many notable instances aro on re- cord of early rising among groat men, although, strangely enough, this ex- cellent habit seems to be going out of favor. M. CI-emencea1 is at his desk every morning while most of his fellow -coun- trymen -are still in the land of Nod, and the sante may be said of Edison, who, when in the throes of a meclrani- cal problem, finds two oe three hours' sleep sufficient for his needs, Napoleon could stay up late and get up early, a gift possessed by Mr. Lloyd George, who is sold to be able to go to sleep almost at once. Lord Reading, when at the Bar, Tres never in bed after 4 a.m., while at one Limo Lard Haldane allowed himself only four hours' sleep. It's a Great Life if You Don't Weaken ___ By Jack Rabbii i Sita F. C. Wade British Columbia's Agent -General In London, who drew the attention of the British Admiralty to the, fart that they were specifying United Stctes s anion in contracts for sueplyieg the envy. One or the officials aihuitt; I timi they thought the -Beetle was the eat. tru,+ sockeye salmon. .illy. Wada daeellesi the illusion and assurance wee given that Canadian salmon will :rove first consideration, Citizenship. Citizenship is P. null more con- siderable affair than rcpistering and voting. It goes far beyond the taking out of naturalization papers to qualify as one of the -body politic in the land el the brave and the free. Citzen.ship has a duty for every citizen, not sim- ply on Election Day, 'but the whole year round, and it is a duty that is social and not merely political. To lee a good citizen is to be a good friend and neighbor. It is to mau•ifest loyalty and integrity in business re- latione. Good citizenship acts to build up not alone the'preeperity of a pri- vate concern, but the welfare of com- merce and trade in general." The goad citizen, singly or corpor- ately, pays his debts. He does not keep others waiting for the money they have earned and therefore awn. Ho has an instinctive horror of bor- rowing' without a definite and melee - stood. prosec-ct of repoynx•nt. FIc keeps his anpoimtnrent-n. He re- spects the right of other men to the same consideration from him that ho wants from them. IIe feels that no each man does his part. is true to hie own trust, minds his own businees, is responsible and reliable in his own person, the average level of credit and prestige for the whole aomm pity will rise. Citizenship means a realizst',tn r.n the part of one man that all men are helped or hindered by lois indiciluii performance. The moan and. diecreciitahie thin -ea we do that count against us genet en the rest as well. As en army 10 Ng - ed by its soldiers, a club by its mem- bers-, a college by its undergraduates, a community is judged by its citizens. The patriot brings distinction on hie home town. That is why we do honer to a elan who fought in I?rarn.'e or prepared to go. Slackers are a re- preach to the public opinion that tol- erate the breed, That is why we dis- countCuaurce them and would hate thou justly penalized. Citieenship, in the full round of its all-encompassing circle, lakes in even the domestic demeanor and the pri- vate life. You ems -net call is man a dzen who is unfaithful—or • geg oven unfeeling—in those intimate A- nytime of the home and the family that are the teat and the revelation of character. He is not to be praised if et the banquet board or ,in the crowded auciltoriutn Or a church as scntblege be loss mneh to say about the virtues, while at home, behind the doors, where -the curlews world d'oea not obstrudd, lois practices ammeter's' rn l despicable,. The good 'citizen! wh uevcr he may be and whatever be, in tieing, has no reams to fear fame the Iigiot, She Had Good References. "Nome did you kill all the germs in bows milk?" "Yee, Milani; I run it through the meat it onpot twice." T} c r are at least live women h ii .. . ..C, in liosgii: h hospitals. �"'^-``„ WHAT OF .LUCK. (C�tJ is '7F Velma, \ 1)10 1 NAV'EZ / /' �' te' ' \ J 6 6��-�41 f------;,;-_:-.,..--- I WAS tis A Dai7ARTMENT ST GRE '(C5TERDAY AND ASL vJeNT fIGK.PoC.t:.ET• Pate 1, TNe LI6µTS OOT YFie,.lit:r.0 an'g l -I. - .ny ilARWP AWFU1._Ili WAS IN�N0 PIANO DEPART ME ter WNE'N 1 C HACoPti NED ci z.ti •-•/\-j ` cog CI��� Ire a-- � U a a ', 1Ll �� - POt4T ••. '�' � � =i~ �, _ • �� ® iv,leiNt(E. ...„.� 1 c --w••--L.ry t _ �_. an e° *`��.,.. =`)^• ° • - i Sita F. C. Wade British Columbia's Agent -General In London, who drew the attention of the British Admiralty to the, fart that they were specifying United Stctes s anion in contracts for sueplyieg the envy. One or the officials aihuitt; I timi they thought the -Beetle was the eat. tru,+ sockeye salmon. .illy. Wada daeellesi the illusion and assurance wee given that Canadian salmon will :rove first consideration, Citizenship. Citizenship is P. null more con- siderable affair than rcpistering and voting. It goes far beyond the taking out of naturalization papers to qualify as one of the -body politic in the land el the brave and the free. Citzen.ship has a duty for every citizen, not sim- ply on Election Day, 'but the whole year round, and it is a duty that is social and not merely political. To lee a good citizen is to be a good friend and neighbor. It is to mau•ifest loyalty and integrity in business re- latione. Good citizenship acts to build up not alone the'preeperity of a pri- vate concern, but the welfare of com- merce and trade in general." The goad citizen, singly or corpor- ately, pays his debts. He does not keep others waiting for the money they have earned and therefore awn. Ho has an instinctive horror of bor- rowing' without a definite and melee - stood. prosec-ct of repoynx•nt. FIc keeps his anpoimtnrent-n. He re- spects the right of other men to the same consideration from him that ho wants from them. IIe feels that no each man does his part. is true to hie own trust, minds his own businees, is responsible and reliable in his own person, the average level of credit and prestige for the whole aomm pity will rise. Citizenship means a realizst',tn r.n the part of one man that all men are helped or hindered by lois indiciluii performance. The moan and. diecreciitahie thin -ea we do that count against us genet en the rest as well. As en army 10 Ng - ed by its soldiers, a club by its mem- bers-, a college by its undergraduates, a community is judged by its citizens. The patriot brings distinction on hie home town. That is why we do honer to a elan who fought in I?rarn.'e or prepared to go. Slackers are a re- preach to the public opinion that tol- erate the breed, That is why we dis- countCuaurce them and would hate thou justly penalized. Citieenship, in the full round of its all-encompassing circle, lakes in even the domestic demeanor and the pri- vate life. You ems -net call is man a dzen who is unfaithful—or • geg oven unfeeling—in those intimate A- nytime of the home and the family that are the teat and the revelation of character. He is not to be praised if et the banquet board or ,in the crowded auciltoriutn Or a church as scntblege be loss mneh to say about the virtues, while at home, behind the doors, where -the curlews world d'oea not obstrudd, lois practices ammeter's' rn l despicable,. The good 'citizen! wh uevcr he may be and whatever be, in tieing, has no reams to fear fame the Iigiot, She Had Good References. "Nome did you kill all the germs in bows milk?" "Yee, Milani; I run it through the meat it onpot twice." T} c r are at least live women h ii .. . ..C, in liosgii: h hospitals.