PAGE FOUR cf THE DAILY BRITISH WHIC, TUESDAY, JUNE 9, 1908. AA ree Brcken Backs This little Device lets At The Root of the J Evil And Removes It Bodily. Only at GOABETT'S Pl Only 75¢. ; BUY THERE IS ONLY ONE MAGIC BAKING POWDER i we WE AERP TU Oe Be a eae mmm rime er wm OSHAWA SHINGLES Made of 28 guage galvanis- ed steel. Fire Proof, Water Proof, Wind Proof, Lightning Proof, easily laid, no solder required, do not rattle. A lasting roof at a fair price. Call in and see them at the office of 8. ANGLIN & C0. Foot of Wellington St. i "Silver Plate that Wears" Ice Cream Forks F , knives, 'ancy serving pieces forks, , fe. in ' faste, are marked "[B47 ROGERS BROS. A variety of exquisite noted for quality. SOLD BY LEADING oraLERS HRER IR]; Cures ALL oe; ALWAYS. THE WHIG, 75th YEAR DAILY BRITISH WHIG, published at 808 810 King street, Kingston, ut $8 per year. ions at 3.30 and 4 o'cleck p.m. _ WEEKLY BRITISH WHIG, 16 pages, pub- i at $1 ow = and Tired ing » . To Uni BE a, 1 Cay best Job Canada; stylish, nine improved b LB. a Daily Whig. HOLDING WHAT WE HAVE. The governments of Ontario and Quebec will have to legislate against the export of pulpwood. The legisia- tion in Ontario with regard to the conversion of logs into lumber made for the wealth and occupation of Ca- nadians, The legislation that simply is one of gets a higher price for pulpwood will not do. "The Americans," writes ord to the Montreal Witness, "are de- stroying our forests at their leisure, "Last year they bought 1,000,000 cord of wood, We get 36 a cord for this, but when it is manufactured in the United States it is worth $40 a cord. Therefore, we are losing $34,- 000,000. Why should there not be leg- islation to assure the utilization of Our resources in our own eountry, thus giving our compatriots the ad- vantage of this enormous inerease of $34,000,000 ? Already the Americans have bought on the upper St. Maurice most of the water powers--almost for nothing. It is because they foresee that a clear-thinking government some day will force them to come here | to make the paper they need. It is time that the government assured the per- manence of the forests by adopting a system of supervised cutting. The for- est is necessary to flow in our rivers, and preserve an even thus to aid Quebec and Omtario are in the same position with regard to this subject. The Americans must have pulpwood for paper. Why should they not have paper which is made in Canada from our pulpwood ? The is- it to be very soon and very our industries. sue is becoming a grave one, and will have seriously considered, ------------------ GOUIN AND BOURASSA. The Quebec legislature will be large. ly liberal, as it was expected to he. The Gouin government kad made a splendid. record for itself, had proven progressive, 'oconomicad, careful, ang the appeal to the people was ex. pected to result favourably. The conservatives were hopeful of making important gains for the rea- son that ih the previous election they had pouted and refused to play. The consequence was an opposition' of seven members, who were scarcely heard in the sessions and who were, becauge of their numerical weakness, without an influence. In an election in which the party was at all active it was bound to make some head- way, though it has failed, like the opposition in Ontario, to make the de. sired headway. The sensation the clash of Bourassa in St. Montreal. 'I'he of the contest the premier and Mr. .James' division of premier was defeated was '|by a small number, but it was enpugh to establish the popularity of the dis- tinguished nationalist. There is ng more pitturesque figure in Quebec, ex- cepting/ Sir Wilfrid Laurier, but it is remarkable that while he charms and oleotrifies the people with his burn- mg eloquence he has not the faculty for conveying his spirit to the peo- ple. His success in the Quebec elee- tions, in Montreal and St. Hyacinthe, is a tribute to his personality, but his failure to secure the election of more than one other (Lavergne, his echo), on his particular platform, is not without its significance. There are some aspects of the Bour assa movement that will not find fu with the legislature, but he professes to have some very high ideals, and if he be faithful to these, as he says he will be, the govern ment will be inspired to do its very best for the province and the peo- ple. Your A STREAM OF POLLUTION. The city election is said to have given no surprise to those who knew what was going on. This air of con- fidence is only assumed, however. No one could predict the result in ad- vance of the discovery of the gold mine, which discovery took place on Saturday. There was maeh pretence of safety in advance of that time, but there was no ground for it. While on the surface there was a show of ex- pectancy, deep down in the heart there was doubt and uncertainty. Up to Saturday the liberals felt that they wonld win. The canvass of the city had been made and it gave promise of a splendid victory. Between Saturday evening and Sun- day. evening the change oeccurrdd. What brought it about ? Nothing | the situation so far as the candidates ters. On Sunday evening the new campaign set in. The the government and of its candidate were sent iu all directions. Some of them were traced. At places where they called the object of their mis sion was learned. There was a great display of money, and apparently many were touched who are not usu- ally susceptible because the figures were large and the distribution gen- erous. . This tide of corruption could not be d, and the liberal workers could only note its direction and ef- fect, and report, as they did later, to the chairmen of committees. There will be more about this carnival of corruption, fos the evidence is now being collected and the court will be asked to pronounce upon it. A great fuss was made about an election for the local house, the great offence of which was the payment of money to a few cabmen or the hiring of a few rigs to carry the voters to the polls. In contrast with this will be the elec- tion of Monday, when the stream of corruption surpassed all previous ex- periences in this city, im recent years or remotely, and if the city can stand the seandal or orgy or debauch, it ean stand anything, however polluting it may be. ------------------ A NEW LEASE OF POWER. The Whitney government has secured what it so anxiously sought in the gerrymander--the loading of the dice-- a new lease of power, and with an in- creased majority, At the moment one cannot determine what the effect of the gerrymander has been. The losses and gains can only be measured after copsiderable study. So far as it tend- ed 10 prevent the liberals from having an eved show for representation it was a ¢lub in the hands of the gov- ernment, and a club which Mr, Whit- ney did not hesitate to use. Outside of the loaded game the gov: ernment will accept the vote of the people as one of satisfaction. Its re cord of three and a hall years -- the including the events of that awful week--will be considered "approved" and the alleged endorse- ment may be the undoing of adminis- tration. To be sure, tha reptile fund has to be reckoned with. It is not at all likely that Kingston was the only constituency so well provided with money for electoral impurity, and a few days hence there will be the revelations which, for the time being, are kept under cover. In the last legislature the govern. ment had a majority of forty-three. In the larger house it will have abput, sixty, which is about fifty too many for good government. The province is promised many things it will not ex- pect--cheager power, cheaper or free books, cheaper (law, and thereafter legislation. Some of them may be heard from again and some of them emissaries of whole of it, 'may not, seeing that a further refer- ence to the people will be avoided for the next three or four years. THE MAN AND HIS WORK. The defeat of the liberal candidate in this city is sincerely regretted. The Whig can say this, modestly, though it is Mr. Pense's paper. There is a certain disadvantage in owning a journal, because it is not free to say what it would do if the candidate were some one else. The place of the newspaper was discounted in this cam- paign, however, because the appeal was not to reason, but to the sordid- ness or cupidity which are only reach- ed and satisfied with the current coin. It mattered not what the man did for the tity, or what his deserts were. The influence that decided the elec- tion was not moved by any sense of gratitude. It was of passing moment that Mr. Pense had served the people freely, cheerfully, faithfully, that as a member of the legislature his only care was for the public interest, that he carried himself honorably and fair- ly at all times, and that he could not be charged with ary neglect of public duty. The work of the member, or his worth, or devotion to the public service, were not questioned. There was simply a carnival of corruption, and it swept the city and left effects which were not confined to the polling, booths. Mr. Pense has nothing to lament, or repent. In retiring from the legisla- ture he has the consciousness of knowing that.. he left a record that will remain: to his credit. Perhaps, under the circumstances--seeing that the province has not had enqugh of the Whitney government, and that the op- with it. Kingston cou'd not weit for a change in its represemtation, it seems. What . sige} eEfr i 1s EEE er seat will be found for "Nelse," hai peshios Me, Whitaey will fist Monteith r-- MILNER ON PATRIOTISY Judge Longley misunderstood by has been seriously some interprets their mind aright, and jut now be'is entitled to very large re spect. It is well to note this, because Collier's has announced that Longley's remarks have been taken to heart in England, and that "it al most looks as if the shade of George III might still be haunting some edi- Justice fonction of the New York Canadian Club. He spoke, too, under some re- straint, on an occasion when it was necessary to weigh well his words. He bad, in his mind's eye, Canada's growth toward nationhood, but whig he talked of independence he *'dis- avowed any leaning to the United States." The point of importance is that the English people are not offended with the judge's address, and if any one feels curious about the address the fault is his own. In discussing the wider patriotism Lord Milner refers to Canada's negotiation of the French treaty, the growth in Australia of a desire for a complete national de- fence, and the lessons of the South Af- rican war, and writes : "The new national spirit will need to find practical expression in new in- stitutions, common to all the states of the empire, and not peculiar, like the present so-called imperial par- liament, to the united kingdom alone. Poor Justice - Longley, whose recent speech at the New York Canadian Club has got him into so much hot water, seems to me, in intention at any Tate; to have heen perfectly right. He did net, as far as one cam make out, by any means advocate the sep- aration of Canada from the united kingdom. On the contrary, his idea seems to he that of a permanent and indissoluble = umion--only a wnion of equals, not the dependence of a 'col ony' upon a parent state. But the permanent and indissoluble alliance of several equal state-units means in effect the creation of a new and larger state. This would be the case even if the combining units were originally quite independent. of and strange to 'one another, and a few national spirit had to be called idto existence. But here there is already a secular con- nection hetween them, and the nation- al spirit, though capable of great fur. ther development, already exists." In Lord Milner's opinion the colonies in their expansion, give pro- mise of something hetter than *"'the parliament of 'men,' the [federation of all the Britains."' There are, he ad- mits, different ties the way of an imperial union, but a longing for it exist® among the British people every- where, and though quiet in normal times it is liable to break into sud- den activity, Indeed the imperial sen- timent "may be a form of the in stinet of self-preservation, and the law of national life." must, in EDITORIAL NOTES, Willie ecouldn't wait. -- The last has not been heard of the Kingston election, ---- The inspiration of Monday's election exhibited itself in some very unfortu- nate ways towards evening. -- They are not yet ready for abolition of the bar Hence the defeat of Dr. -- The late Mr. Tarté must have been thinking of Kingston when he said that elections were not won by pray- ers, the in Toronto. Hossack, The. dehauching of the slectors--the people who were susceptible to the money influence~was a fine setting for Sunday. Gallagher and Revnolds suffered great anxiety, last evening, while the election returns kept electing them alternately, The greatest victory in the province is Allan Studholme's, in East Hamil tor. And it was not secured with the use of money. Of course Mr. Whitney and hiy col leagues will keep on dint the Whig. They would be very lonesome without it, -- Mr. Milligan must be very prapd of his majority of one in Stormont. He will have to nurse it very carefully in order to keep it alive, The men who laughingly said early in the day that the Whitnev candidate was sure {0 win were in the secrets of the party. They were present when the gold mineiwas discovered. The nationalists in the Quebec leg- islature will not eut very much ice, but they can ent figures to perfection. It is fitting that Bourassa and Layergne should be inseparable, bess 1" Bourassa and Lay¥ to re- present the Natighalist party the Quebeo legislatheb, They will be quite The Name of Back Wien people, but | not by the Englishmen, if Lord Milner | torial-offices."" The judge spoke at al. as helpless a¢ they were in the com- mous, but they will help the opposi- tion with their heroic 'bluster. { Poor Alick Wright, after all he said about cheap power, the the machine, was erashed in Wright finding what "Billy" Maclean discoverad when he ran for the mayoraity, that the Al bany Club's collar is necessary to po aristoaracy and Toronto. is litical success, ---- On dit, that several detectives were from abroad in order to in Kingston. imported watch the wicked grits Attorney-General Foy was warned that his party premeditated a pollution of the constituency, and as the big po- licemen of the province he should have become busw. PITH OF THE NEWS. The Very Latest Culled From All Over The World. King Edward and Emperor Nichol- as met at Reval this morning. The Presbyterian General Agsembly decided to meet next year in Hamil ton. The volcano one of the Samoan eruption. Owing to the shortage. of cattle meat prices will be advanced in the United States. The steamer Lady Fileen was wreck- ed while trying to make Dalhousie Harbor, N.B. Am unknown tramp was killed, at London, by a pile of railway ties falling upon' him. A Sol he. eon, Moronto, a negro, was sentenced to six months in the Central prison for stealing a bag. It is reported, at Ottawa, that the government will give Manitoba more territory than was originally intend- Muon, Savaii lsland, islands, is in The case against Samuel Henry and James McMullen, Toronto, charged with robbing Daniel Ruse, will go to a jury. Toronto council by a vote of four- teen to four referred back the recom- mendations regarding fire hose ten ders, | Steps are being taken to have the conviction of Mary Barch, a young French girl from McDougall"s Chutes quashed in Toronto. The financial and statistical reports, to be presented to the Toronto ' as sociation of Baptist churches, to-day, show a steady growth. The Toronto socialists have con- demned the police in a resolution, he- cause of interference with their rights of free speech in the streets. An action brought by Jghn Ross, Toronto, against his former partners, Messrs. McRae & Chandler, was heard in the non-jury assize court, Toronto. Walter Cumming was drowned at Campbellford after succeeding in sav- ing his younger ! brother, who was swept off his feet in a swift stream. TRISIS IN KOREA. ------ There is Great Unfriendliness to Japan. Tokio, June 9.--Another crisis in the relations of Korea and Japan is im- pending. Unfriendliness of Koreans of, the ruling class towards Japan is evidently increasing instead of diminishing. It has developed council, composed statesmen and those who were for- merly ministers, recently adopted a resolution prohibiting the employment, of Japanese officials. That the privy council is powerless to carry out the project is significant. Prince Jto, the Japanese resident-general, summoned the ministers and the state and pre: fectural governors, and delivered a vigorous pronouncement, declaring that if present conditions are allowed to continue the country will be lost. The Koreans, he said, raised wanton cries for repealing the Japtn-Korean agreement, but to do so without suf- ficient national strength would mean less independence, paively reminding the Koreans that they must not forget that once they were under the rule of China. v Several changes in the Korean cabi- net are announced, the most impor: tant being the transfer of Song Plung- chun, Japan's chief ally, from the de- partment of agriculture to that of the interior. Song Plangchun is head of the notorious llchinhoi. Seoul despntches state that very im- portant matters will be announced in a few days and meanwhile the pover- nors are ordered to remain in Seoul. that the privy of princes, elder Baseball On Monday. Eastern League--Newark, 7: Baltis more, 1. Buffalo, 6; Montreal, 3. Tor- onto, 4; Rochester, 2 (ten innings). Providence, 3; Jersey City, 2 American Lemgue--Chicago, 2; Wash- ington, 1. St. Louis, 10; Philadelphia, 0. New York, 6; Cleveland, 1. Detroit- Boston game was played Sunday. Kational League -- Cincinnati, 3; Brooklyn, 2, Pittsburg, 5; Philadel phia, 0. New York, 4; Sg Louis, 0. Chicago, 5; Boston, 2. Be Rid Of Boils. or any other skin eruption, acute or chronic, will be '8 Ointment. gives prompt relief when other remedies fail. Cures eczema (salt rheum), pimples, scald head, piles,, dandruff and all * A boil whether "> oa Notices were to-day sent out to own- ers of vacant lots around the city that be weeds must be cut, If this re EE ---- EE A wn wh 1 Cool | Clothes City people are flying to the country and country people are fleeing to the 'city. Each and all in search of comfort and change. We're going to stay right here and pro- vide both with Comfortable Summer Wearables Ih 1 on N Suits of Home- spuns F'wo or three piece styles, $6.- 50, F150, $50, 10, $12 and 815. Outing Trousers Choice Negligee Shirts 750., 81, $1.25, Summer Under- wear 2e., Sbe., TBec., $1, garment. Handsome Hosiery 20¢. pair, 3 for S0c, 10c. pair, 2 for 73¢ New Styles in Belts 5c. values O0v. §1 values 78c. Bathing Suits . Combinatioh or two-piece, S00 to ¥2. FincySummer Vests Something special at $1, Straw Hats $1.50, §2, Yachting Caps S0e., T0e., $1, ¥1.25, $1.00 $1.25 4 ec. $i, Ad THE H. D. BIBBY CO. Add Sha ee a a a a a AAA hi ---- CHANGING SENTIMENT. Goldsmith's Village." Goldsmith in his "Deserted Village," spoke of a certain chapel where those who "went to scoff remained to pray.' So in life one often laughs at what he does not understand, his laugh turns to praise. There are some who doubted the merits «f Newbro's 'Her picide,"" the scalp gf rmicide and hair dressing; but since tiwy have tried it they are now among its best friends and strongest endorsers Herpicide kills the germ that eats the hair off at the root, and the hair then grows again. As a hair dressing it is' in comparable; try it. Sold by leading drugpists; Send 10¢ in stamps for sample to The Hepicide Co., Detroit, Mich. Pwo sizes, BOec and 81. G. W. Mahood, 'spedial agent Oliver "Deserted Toronto Street Market. Toronto, June ®.-<Whettt, white, per bushel, 92c.; wheat, red, per bush- el, 92. wheat, e¢pring, per bathe U0ec.; wheat, goose, per bushel, 9c. oats, per bushel, barley, * per bushel, 065¢.; peas, per hushe!l, Re. to 00¢.; hay, per ton, 312 4" §l4; straw per ton, $I1 to $12! "dressed * hogs, $8.25 to $8.50; eggs, new laid, per dozen, 18c. to P0c. Butter, dairy, 19. to 23c.; butfer, creamery, 3c. to 25¢.; chickens, year old, per Ib., 17¢ to 20e.; fowl, per 5, 130 to 14 apples, per barrel, '$2 to 3: cablage, per dozen, 40c. to B0c.; onions, per bag, $1.25 to $1.40; potatoes, per bag. 90c. to $1; beef, hindquarters $0.50 to 811.50; beef, forequarters, $6 to 87.50; beef, choice, carcass, 8 89.50; beef, medium, carcase, $6.50 to] $7.50; mutton, per cwt., $0 to, ¥10.50 veal, prime, per ewt.. $7 to $30. lamb, per cwt.,, ¥14 to 15. 52¢.; An Emergency Physician. You are sure to save needless. suf fering and you may save life by hav ing at hand a bottle of Smith's White Linjment. It is of vital importmnce that pain or injuries: be treated promptly. Here is a remedy that re lieves pain in an almost. Magical way, and cures steains, bruises, lame backs, ete, quicker than any other remedy we know of, 20¢. at Wade's Drug Store. Trap For The Piano Tuner. New York Press. , "No, now don't you take that piece of chamois," said the man at the desk s# the hand of the woman wandered in its direction. "I know it's = mice (Girls Shoes and Slippers In Dongola Kid and Pat- ent Leather,strap and laced, with heel or spring heel, light and cool for the sum- mer at $1.25 and 1.50. H. JENNINGS, King St. TRADE IMPERIAL you buy Underwenr nek | IMPERIAL CROWN BRAND _ Every garment wrarantend. Durability comiorte Made only by KINGSTON HOSIERY CO, LTD., Kingston, Omty \ RRR RRO ROR RO RRR looking piece; but | bought it special- ly for g purpose. I taleph i the man to come to-morrow amd tume my piano. In the morning beore 1 come dawn here I'm going to- lay this piece of chamois across the keys. Ther when I get home I'll know whether he has tuned it or not. M fa. glue. he has; if it's still on the keys, hasn't." KINGSTON AND YARKER. \ We received on:Saturday, a very fine lot of Feather Mounts, in White (as well as colors) we have the Orange Bléssoms also, and all are vary suggestive too---Well the Ladies' ER (THE JUNE BRIDE) and of course the hat suitable for occasion, we can easily supply, 228 Princess St. 7 me ex | Pearsall's Millinery Shiaugh SUT lsevere eracks were dealt out in the [directions head with & bottle god received a had {town hotel. About eleven o'clock, Monday night, a flores fight took place in a down- Two men started the sernp and before long twelve or four teen were mixed up in it. Quite a fow all One man was hit ower the "Citrate of cools the Mot Sol at las yranls the