Daily British Whig (1850), 2 Dec 1902, p. 4

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H eaters AT CORBETT'S. "BUILT FOR BISINESS." PLAIN FACTS! THIS CARRIACE HEATER Will make a foitable in the It will give fifteen hour It is per hove, absolutely com- coldect weather. a continueus heat for tt a ¢éost of T cent ops toc It renders danger from fhe impos- sible. ft Js. absolut unbneakable, It i= corstructed without SOLDER or CASTINGS, If mav le heated and ready within a few ; It will Inst a lifetine. 175,090 IN ACTUAL USE, From $2.75 to $6. AT CORBETT'S HARDWARE. for use minutes, If you like a good cnp of tea try our "INDIA BLEND" 25¢ , 80¢ , 8fe., 40¢., 50¢. pour du For best results in bali g use o STARR BRAND BAKING POWDER. EXTRACTS AND SPICES. THE STARR CO. 185 WELLINGTON ST. (arriages lappiages EVERYBODY Who has rubber tires on their arriages are well pleased with the ease and comfort they enjoy in driving, if you have not got them on your carriage you should send to LATURNEY and have them on and enjoy your LATUGNEY, JAMES CARRIAGE MAKER, 390 Priacess St. Kiagstoa Behe oo) a2 oD] 2 DON'T WASTE MONEY On .poor, ill-lavored but- ter, when you can get a pound of the best Clarified Butter, sweet and finely- flavored, for 25¢c. Try a pound and see how pleased you will be. Clarified Milk Co., 'Phone 567. Breck & Bagot Sts. 9 DC Cho (TTR RTT Ti SEL & Re RET Rw A TR WE Ta Ty TO-LET --- a uooD FURNISHED Rusaus A without board, 101 Quson sire 1 4 FOUR GOOD FURNISIIED , with all modern 191 University Avenue. ROOMS, WITH converiiences, at 43 KING STREFY, WEST, BEAUTIFULL) situated, facing the llarbor." Rent © $24¢ 5d. Jie Apply to Kirkpatrick, Rogers HOUSE, 7 LOOMS, NO. 56 BAY STREF] between Bagot and Rideau streets; also stable and sheds in rear. . Apply 48 Wil- "ham atreet. - 4 115 STUART STREET, 9 ROOMS. HO1 water. heating; Also other dwellings, stores and oflices. J. S. R McCann, 51 Brock St. STORK OCCUPIED. BY R. ALEXANDER, N( 111 Brock street, with refrigerator, fi tures, ow. for pork and meat trade. A; ply to Johm MoKay, Jr., 15). Broa street MONEY AND BUSINESS. ---- EEE TTD Te an - LIVERPOOL, LONDON AND GLOBE FIR}: Insurance Company. Available assets, $61,187,215. no addition to. which the slioy holders have for security the un- imited lability of all the stockholders. Farm and Citv Property insured at lowest possible rates. ore renewing old or giving new business got rates from RANGE & STRANGE, Agents. Angier's Petroleum Emulsion with Hypo- phosphites is pre- scribed by physi- cians for children's diseases. The little ones thrive on it. It is pleasant to take and agrees with the stomach. It is the best children's medi- cine. They become fond of it. Put your child onasteady treatment of Angier's Petro- leum Emulsion, and note how quickly it gains in health and becomes strong and robust. The Emulsion improves ap- petite, aids digestion, regu- lates the stomach and bowels, es, and revital- y little #irl was troubled with bronchitis and a =ch hacking cough almost simce birth. Nothing sefited her until my drucgist advised me to give ber Angier"s Petroleum Emulsion, which Idid. It cured the congh, and she almost immediately began to gain in flesh and improve in color. To-day she is 2s strong and robust as can be.-- A. To- ronto, Angier's Petroleum Emulsion is sold druggi: everywhere. Remember the name insist oa getting Angier's. Large size, $1.00. Small, soc. ANGIER CHEMICAL COMPANY, BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS, U.S.A. ir Xact Fit Xquisite Designs Xpert Workmanship in 6 Shirts and what more dc you want in a shirt ? Look for this name inside the Collar. For sale by all best dealers Ryrie Watches. WHI LST we guarantee to keep a *' Ryrie"' Watch--aside from break- age--in perfect action for two years, there is no limit to its perfect time- keeping qualities. We select for special mention our No. 5508 "Ryrie'® Watch at $25. ayy Samay Itis a 15-Jewel Movement In a 14k. Solid Gold Case. 'We guarantes its safe delivery, and will ebeerfully refund the full price iw 1s not perfectly satis Ryrie Bros., "7 Jewelers, Yonge aad Adelaide Streets, Toronto. Is served every place where good THE WHIG -- 68TH YEAR DAILY BRITISH WHIG, published each evening, at 306-310 King Street, at $6 per vear. Kditions at 2:30 and 4 o'clock WEEKLY BRITISH WHIG, 12 pages, pub- lished every y morning at $1 a Attached is. one of the best Job Printing Offices in Canada: rapid, stylish and cheap work; mine improved presses. DW. J. B. PENSE, PROPRIETOR. I'HE DAILY WHIG. Opifer per Orbem Dicor.' INDEPENDENT JOURNALISM. Mr. retirement from the Globe remarkable. He is man, who merited the promotion received until he reached the head directed the Canada's leading liberal paper. His relations with the staff and the of the most harmonious kind. Then why his He bas statoment inter Willison's is an able he of and edi- of his profession torial columns directors were change ? made a which He Globe to enter independent journalism sting. leaves the 15 and writes : "I will be associated with J. W. Flavell. He will supply the capital, and all the capital, for the new ven- ture. - No money will eome from any other source. It is the distinct and clearly-expressed understanding that the paper to be acquired or establish, ed shall not be the organ of any po- litical party or of any organized in- terest, and shall be absolutely inde pendent of all business and corporate enterprises. The only objects in view are free and frank discussion of public questions, in no spirit of hostility to any party, and without regard to the effects upon any party, to debate pub- lic questions only upon public grounds to further in a sane, rational and practical way all movements which seem to make for the public better- ment, and, above all things, not to employ the paper for the promotion of the private interests of any individual or group of individuals." Mr. Flavelle has been identified with . the conservative party and Mr. Willi the liberal. that they see some advantage in be- son with The inference is ing non-political in their influence, and at this particular time in political his- | tory having an unbiased attitude up- The to established by them will, in point be of ability, command attention, and it re- on passing events. paper mains to be scen how far it will affect the public mind. There are great is the people, in re- the sues in sight, and gard to these, | will appreciate clearest light. Combinations have heen without considering its impress upon allied and corporate interests. The in- ference is that Mr. Willison has felt the touch of these baleful interests, and wants. to get away from them. Backed by a. man like Mr. Flavelle his pen will be at liberty to write the | | things his head and heart dictate. The result will be "watched with: profound interest, FOSTER AS A QUIBBLER. Hon. Mr. Foster is not pleased | ; . . ; | with the referendum: Speaking at | Toronto--called gut of his rest, his 1 retirement, and forced to speak, ,ap-! parently somewhat against his will -- legislature behind it. "You have this referendum to-day, because this manly, straightforward principle of responsible legislation has been dodged. It is as dead as the letters that compose it, until you people call it into life. The man who | | | | mier | ence one gets from reading his speech. | government fraightforward . kind which Mr. Fos ter ix supposed. ta appreciate. Did they got it ? No. Mr. Foster, listened wrote letters, can sav, 'If 'it doesn't abolish the traflic, it was not my fault, but the people who did it. "1 don't like to have my hands tied. We have to fight the -ghost of a majority four years dead and we have to fight the stay-at-home. [ | like a vote which will say by a ma- jority, it doesn't matfer how large, to which side the victory belongs." Here vou have the politician at work, and with the usual effect.® The Liquor Act of 1902 and the referen- dum are not the measures Mr. Foster would have given the people had he, in place, of Mr. Ross! been the pre- | i of Ontario. That is the infer- Would he have provided amv thing bet- ter the reader back to Mr. Ottawa. He was then, Memory takes | the time when Foster was in the at as he is now, believed to be a temper The wanted legislation, and of the manly, ance man. people temperance to the appeal, and consented to, the appointment of the roval commission,' ' THE DAILY? WRIG, TUESDA:. DECEMBER 2. ", ae. effects Mr. Foster has offered some valuable testimony in the past. He could do it again if he were as eager to help the cause as he is to hurt the government of Ontario. ---------- INGRATITUDE AND ITS EFFECTS. The Woodstock Express has kindly explained what it means by saying that Mr. Ross did not give the people a straight prokibi isn act. "Straight," in respect of not being referred to the prople for approval. And who, rati- onally, can object to the electors be- ing consulted ? The legislature of 1902--which went out of office so soon after the passing of the liquor act--had not a mandate to pass the prohibitory measure It was four years from the time a plebiscite had heen opinion is subject to frequent changes. Mr. Ross" submitted " forth liquor traffic, the act; setting the limit of restriction in the and he leit it to the people to say, by a direct and posi- tive vote, whether it should be enfore- ed. The Express is pleased with the suc- cess of the independents the last It ought to be. <The party it supports gained several seats by the liberals dividing on the temperance question, while the conser- vatives were solidly "on the in provincial election. other side. tionists made, in the Express' opin- ion, was in "not pressing it with 'a little more and sincerity." Some, in punishing the people energy who served them, did wonders for the con- servative party. Had they done a lit- tle more Mr. Whitney would have been premier, and then--good-bye 'to prohi- bition and all that it impli EDITORIAL NOTES. Gen. Lew Wallace, the author of Ben Hur, is ill. It is feared that he may not recover his healch. This will Le sad news for the literary world. -- The veterans have received their land ceriilicates. The next act is to select the farm. The government is | providing every facility for this pur- pose. The issue of the next parliament will le the Grand 'Trunk Pacitic scheme. The government will he asked to vote formed for the purchase of land, the a subsidy. The people, in their pre huilding of railways, the exploitation 'sent temper, will certainly object. of all manner of schemes, and al . i . . l I Mr. Chamberlain is a great man, liament has to do with them and the | Se : oat one of the ablest living public men, people indirectly. | : A : : igs . . I but it will be going too far to say, as Mr. Willison seems to see in the, cana re : : { the St. Thomas -1imes has done, that | near future the necessity of a press. . : . : + he is the greatest man the world has which will champion and protect the ris : 5 ever secn. public interests, which will be free to say what it thinks right and best The conservatives, in talking. so glibly of the cost of Sir Richard Cart. wiirht's first election in Lennox, for- get that he ran as a conservative that time: The reflection is therefore not upon the literal party. Pr. Miligan's idea is that the poor people should be got into the fine churches and made "to feel at home. But' how ? What effort is the church making to look up the poor and show its just regard. The tariff will not be tampered "with at the ersuing | session of congress. That. is the opin on of that old horse, Senator ' watr- Hoar. "He says that i id the country i: prosperous, and the we said : : *F dont like hi i 1 I i republican party knows enough to let aon Ike Ms relerendun. > - wish it. never had been. 1 hope it well enongh al ne will be the last of the kind in this or | : > a | any other province. <1 like TRV Wheat is cheap in the far west be- legislation with responsibility on the ® case the fodder crop is light and it will not pay to feed the cattle. Cana- dian have no occasion to sacriice their cattle this year. They have an abundance of feed, and meat ought to be good and rea-onably cheap. > en, So far this year the shipments of butter an cheese have exceeded those of last year and the vear before. It is estimated hy ga that "several millions of dollars over and above recent returns have come tke into the country as a result of year's work." ------ The prodigious service of the rail- ways in moving the North-West crops is indicated hy the fact that wp to Saturday the C.P.R. had carried for- ward, to bushels. There woull be less need rush if had sfo:ehouses, shipping of the the farmers proper ------ The young Germans who-have-come to Kingston to work in the locom- tive works are certainly the represent atives of a-superior-class of workmen. They are educated mechanics, men with trained intellects as wel as hands, and fair samples of the la- hour that is making a great of the mother land. nation Overcoats at The H..D. Bibby Co, = 7 : . : i MONEY TO LOAN IN LARGE OR SMALL goods are sold. lam ome yn sal m0 yO APNESS CANNOT. sums, at low rates of interest on city | thousands of dollars in collecting evi r BE CURED iin farm property. Loans. yranted oo TT nce--the SmBert--of y : By local - applications as. they. canwot ty and county 'debenturee. Apply tc | re dence the tinport of, which~was that Teach othe Ha ] hn i 3 h i wn ; a e Pad "e © car B,C non, Stake of Sr Siege | Sole agent of Kingston, J. S. |. country was nat ripe for prohibi There is only one way to cure deafness. : ith K | s "we 3 aa ry that Is hy constita ; posite the Post Office. | Henderson. tion. Fhe report of that commission, tay is caused Po Woional - 1 : " x bv the wi i% vor noted freely py dition of the mucous dining >*> {WO HUNDRED THOUSAND DOLLARS In | y | ILL Wi f ie Way: 08 Yet quota leely DY Easteehian. Tin When this sums from one thousas" fo ten thous | DON TWA T TIL WINTER the opponents of prohibition and is inflamed you have a rumbimg sound or and dollars. For particulars appiv eh Refore vou think of getting your sleighe : i. umpericet hearing. and when it is entire- GODWIN'S INSURANCE EMPORIUM. | and cutters ready for the firkt gleich drive. the stumbling © block to the prohibi- jv' closed, Dean 8% iv the result. an aver Frowess Office Market Sem lave them made ready now. Winter will y : . Ine aa ¥ HL, ana nee come with . to tion party in every province in Can ur ie = the inf imation can be taken out sep . ser n o m to us 334 ] Y © and this' tybe restored to its normal UNDERTAKERS. Ne. 2 1 - a a h bh ad And it was Mr. Foster's work, condition. hearing wail be distros Jf . are als . he wg Hine cases -o i ten are causes =r = winter ail f earria a Lhe fact is that Mr. Foster's wail, 1 \ T Cataneh > eh en hut : 2d IF. F. HARPISON OC. UNDERTAKERS | Lots of room. Call and mse us Son yan rril, whi 3 LE an . 283.288 Prin Stiaets Guality andl W.'G. ExOST. Carriage Palnter recently, was. altogether out of place. Jala « whi IL ol the mucous sups Sfdcecy it best. oe 2 towet | 402 Klong Streit Hace The issue was not the referendum. The We will give One. Hundred Paoliars for 'hones--Warerooms, * A a 2 Sa ; of Deafness (caus I T FF Harrison. 5) TL TO Tv RY question of the dg is. Shall the hi 11 cahnot 1 ured "hy Hall | FURNISHED ROOMS # : a re A eur ns | J 3 . N Red avsto be continued of hall Catarth Cure Send for circulars, free 8. 8 CORBETT. FUNERAL DIRECTOR, 281 | WITH OR WITHOUT BOARD; ALSO TARR | ("PSC system be continued 'or of Lb CHENEY & C0) Toledo, © 'Princess Street, Kingston, Successor '| board Apply 168 King street West, "be abolished On the trade and ®its Seld FV -br Sts The - W. M. Dresses. pear City Park. : i Hall's Family Pills are the best : taken and public | The only mistake the prohibi- | Montreal authority | point, 22,800,000, SAYINGS AND COMMENTS. By. Captain J. D. Chartrand, of | Kingston. To the Editor of the Whig : The question of prohibition is upen | us. All citizens have a free saying on. | | the matter. 1 avail myself of this lib. | {erty to print the following, which I | {published in La Patrié, of Montreal {on the 17th of February last : ! { "The Province of Ontario is deep in- jlo it. Prohibition bas submerged its | people. The decree is out and the vote [will take place on the 4th of December | next. "This is a victory for extremists of forced temperance, imposed the dag ger on the throat. But the English | people ave skillful, diplomatic and [political swimme They calculate {their strength and distance, when they take a decp dive. ° "So it is that prohibition will not | be legal, unless -it is voted by at least one-half of the electors, who re- gistered their votes in the provincial elections" of 1898. "This is an ironical or rather hu [mouristic way to get out of a tight corner. All efforts now will tend to hinder people to vote, "When the national referendum took place, Ontario, practically alone, gave a strong) majority in favor of prohibi tion, but it relied upon other pro vinces to kill the measure. Besides, its votes harily represented twenty-one per cent. of its electors. : "But Ontario is now {of the problem.. For | much, at the bottom, | ly a fake. alone in face it looks very as if it was on- I Our sister province is too intelligent to really believe that radi-~ cal prohibition is in anyway possible. "However, it is nec ssary to give satisfaction to influence men, who think or seem to think that heer and whiskey are worse than black pest. | For everybody knows that nothing is { absolutely bad in life, the abuse of it {alone is. Well, there will alwavs be | abuses, here and everywhere, in spite { of all administrations and legislative | restrictions. Abuses have never been | eradicated by such measures. They | have tried it in the. United States with pitiable unsuccess. "Prohibition is a s mple school of hypocrisy and crimes against the | law. The man who wants his whiskey | [will get it in spite of all laws. For | that he will hide himself, he will be: | come a smuggler, he- will cultivate hid- den and private drunkenness, which is the worst kind of drunkenness. It is through moral education and | necessities for existence that a check | should he put on alcoholism, which is | today far inferior, whatever may be | said to the contrary, to what it was thirty years ago. In my vouth, men | of high standing used to get drunk of- | ten and openly. It is not the case | now. "A man of to-day who abuses his | | | | drinks soon becomes an outcast of business and society. Fear of public opinion and neeessities to earn one's | | living are the best checks on alco- | { holism, but total abstinence decreed by law is infallibly doomed to a piteous failure. | "Nevertheless, 1 am ready to ad mit that all the agitation made about prohibition have heen one of the causes | of the decrease of drunkenness, we are witnessing now-a-days, but radicalism | in such a measure is entirely out of | question, a pure utopia." | On the 25th of February, a few | days, later, I wrote the following in | the same paper : ! "And what are we to do with the | immense. army of men who make a {living out of the fabrication 'and | manipulation of alcohol of all sorts ? | This a grave' question which | trouble all great minds, like Professor { Grant, CGoldwin Smith, two eminent | anti-prohibitionists. Se "For instance, 1 see in France, Ww here this: question has also heen agitated, | that nearly 14,000,000 of people earn | their living through . that. There are | | 2.000.000 wine and cider growers: 30, [ 000 coopers, 15,000 brewer: t land commercial tray ellers, | transporters of alcohol, wine, | cider and liquors, S00,000 hotel = and {barroom keepers © and restaurants. | This amounts to about 5,000,000 heads | of families who are interested in the | consummation of alcohols, under all { forms and colors, without mentioning the wives, children and employees of | these 5,600,000, which would bring up these figures to about 14,000,000, that is to-say to more than a third 18 [ | | | | | 50.000 beer, wi | of the population of that country. i { "It is the same evervwhere, but | | France, being a wine growing land | must necessarily come ahead. Never theless the principle stands good for all countries. "As | said before, what will become {of all these people if the industry of alcohol is suppressed ? Who will in demnify them for their capitals in vested" in these undertakings? And from where will 'the state get revenues to- compensate the income it draws from that. source These economical problems are very difficult to solve. "And there is also a great question of justice. The manufacture of alco hol has been legal till now, therefore, leg timate. If the state deprives them of their livelihood, it will be of the most elementary justice to give them compensations for the sustain ed through radical prohibition. And then what confusion and discord every where ! : "This is rapidly the economical side of the question, but the moral side of it is also very interesting to glance over once more. "It has been proved many a time, that drinks are sold in greatest quan tity, when it forindden. It hu man 'nature. The more a thing is for bidden, the more © man, who is a grown-up child, craves for it. "In exery village, town and city of Canada, at the hotels or bar-rooms, there are secret passages. guarded by vigilent gsentries, who admit the right kind of visitors, the: 'true material. The unknown; the doubtful is pitiless Iv left hy the inflexible Cerberus The dark passages lead to unlighted counters to small wickets, ont of which pass more glasses than are sold the The Sunday alwave the great harvest day." are I eleven months ago: here are now, thos I have to say today To begin with a te. | have frie tionist state of Maine + losses is is ont or whole week. above the words said The personal ane the nrohioa of them rine pal u i a © mn LL v his who drugs beer nm partnership gives the Ou my are le a iskey. } ith doctor; prescriptions way to sit him, I got led me on the shoulder, looked { emerged into a splendid bar, with a counter about forty feet long. avout | twenty men, with eyes bright, and voices: loud, were enjoying varied drinks. 1 took an excellent cocktail and I followed the boy back. 1 saw several other boys in attendance for | measure, not to say more, that {"olden times, + "From ANCIENT INDIA They possess the RARE M THE SAME AT Prices -$1, 70¢., 60c., 50c. and 40¢. per 1b. A Man | more weight well dressed. book needs a for luxuries vi go to look to save them. There are a at moderate P $6 50, $7. . ¥ $15 fora su THE I One Price ~d and SWEET CEVLOR.™ : E He walks with a firmer step-- his eye is brighter--his wits are keener, and his opinion carries Suit, and we will show you how Kinks of Fashion in Fall Suits, but you can get them all here $10, $12, $12 50, $13, $14, 1. D. BIBBY " dt ERIT of being ALWAYS ALL TIMBS. At Your Grocers. eels with it, if he is If your pocket few extra dollars fj sit us, when you for your Winter number of new rices, say, 50, $8, $8.50, it. CO., stranded in Portland, for a few hours, waiting for my rain. In the hotel, before any meal, 1 went to the clerk asking for the bar. The man al- most shot me dead with his eyes, say ing : "We have no bar here, s 1 understood and returned to my news A moment after, a boy touch- at me mysteriously, making a sign to follow him. We passed through two reoms, went down two long and dark stairs and paper. the same purpos I stayed ten days in that state and can hoast of having seen there more drunken men jn the streets than any- where else. This is my only experience of a pro- hibitionist state. Prohibitionists (words of Mr. Fer- guson) say the measure is very good in itself. but they can hardly find honest mien to strictly enforce the law, But then, in that case, it is a useless they are trying to pasa. Statisticians gay the population of certain countries does not increase at all, but the consumption of alcohol | increases steadily. | Very well: Tt is a'sign that people | now know better- how to drink. - In | and now a days also; al man would get thoroughly drunk for | a day or two or more and then stay | { { sober for days. Now most men drink more regular! a little each day, enough to keep them gay, sociable and talkative. Of this two kinds of men, the periodical drunkard will eer | tainly drink less on the long run, but | his protracted sprees will Kill- him | sooner = than the - moderate, regular drinker; who absorbs more liquids in | the year, but who only entertains his svstem, without running it down. | See in France, for instance, there is more alcohol consumed than anywhere | clse. But 1 defy any one. who « has | | travelled in France, to aflirm he saw | a single drunken man in the streets. The reason is very. simple. The Frenchman drinks moderately, | but often. And he is allowed to take | his glass at aay time, night and day, | Sundays included. He is not restrain ed by anv law except by his own free will. This liberty him drunkenness. | During my eighteen years service in' France, 1 am' proud to. say that | have seen a very few men punished for | saves from | Clothing Store, Oak Hall. {after use of one bottle, BEAUTIFUL WOMEN. No. 2 Lucretia M. Davidson The well known pote was not -only famed for her poetry, but also for her beauty, especially aer brilliant complexion. A PURE SKIN Is above all things to be de sired in a beautiful woman. Those who possess such should guard it jealously, and those who do not should use overy effort to gain it. CAMPANA"S ITALIAN BALM is to the skin what a tonic is to the invalid. It is life and sus- tenance. It softens, cleanses, and, with time and patie will posi- tively work wond with the worst of skins. Ask Your Druggist. Price, 25¢. By mail, 35c. Hutchings Medicine Co. A GUARANTEED GURE For All Forms of Kidney _ Disease. The Toronto. We. the undersigned Druggists fully prepared to give the following guarantee with every 50 cent bottle of ~ Dr. Pettingill's Kidney:-Wort Tah are lets, (the only "remedy in the world that positively cures all troubles arising from weak or diseased kid nes © "Money cheerfully returned "if the sufferer 1s not relieved and improved Three to six icct astonishing and perman- Ii not relieved and cured, bottles ent cures. | you waste no money." Henry Wade, Druggist, Kingston, Int. G. W. Mahood, Druggist, Kingsgon, Ont. parison applies to prohibition, as it stands now in. Ontario. Beware of water drinkers, says French proverb. This true, for man who takes only water, as a be generally a very unsociable on a erage, is man. He has a very few devoted friends, as a rule. Nothing like a little glass to put a little wit and | gaiety in any conversation or social function. Now. I understand and approve of | compulsory: vaccination against small pox, or any other measure against a general danger, for they are evils which may attack the whole community. But reprove radical prohibition, which is intoxication. What other nations can 3 Main 2 <BR a" measure against individual hoerty. say as much ? Nevertkless, France } . - Hes .| And further more, in spite of "that, drinks more alcohol than any other | nation of the world, not only wine, mind vou, but also beer," cognac ard absinthe. . Kingston has had here a fender of prohibition 'with Mr. son; from Chicago. The case must | a very bad one "then, when we are, forced to get an outside advocste 'to defend it. Tt i like a criminal casein law. If it is an ordinary affair, the accused takes a loeal lawyer, but if the case is very bad, he goes after the | most prominent practitioner of the country to try to save him. This com oreat de Ferga he | | more, favor of prohibition, for they will «ell { as much, even more, of their produce men will drink all the same, and per; And for them m qost are that will the d stiilers haps more. also, and twice as dear. I think 1 said enough for today, maybe too much and | recommend to I my readers to look carefully over pamphlet of John Mudie. They fnd in--that exposed in a methodical manner, with | able and probing arguments against prohibition. the will little hook the whole case As far as | am concerned, | am en tirelv indifferent about the results of be vote of the 4th of December next t AN HONEST DOCTOR. 1 only wanted to put in the case'a | few arguments of common sense. | And [| canclude this rather long Lditor : If .any of your readers suf- | ticle hy a personal 'idea, which, al fer from "sexual weakness resulting irom youthful folly," premature loss of | hough not new, perhaps, ha na dicenssion of that kind, its, plac strength and memory, weak back, | | think the he¢t means to check in varicocele or emaciation, my Latest! (i iyperance are to be obtained, as | Mcthod Treatment will cure them, So (id above: by education. fear of pub positive am | that it is an infallible |; opinion, necessities of making a cure, that nothing need be pata until | ine and the severity of the em the cure is effected; this is certainly a ployers, who should not hesitate « fair. proposition, for if 1 had anv ent 'to sever their connection doubts as to its efficacy, I could not (ith any of their employees, who make this oifer for patients to pv i ii tao often the modest. beer when cured. It makes no dillerence 1 oy oculent sooteh and soda. or the who bas. failed to cure them, let them ¢ pio ble cocktail. ' write me pnd 1 will send my book and But 'don't deprive han of his in blank for home treatment free. licidual liberty They cau gcdrese me in confidence, : SID CHARTRAND. Dr. Goldberyz, Dept. M_, 208 Woorl ward Ave. Detroit, Mich. - i Overcoats at The H. D. Bibby Co.

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