Daily British Whig (1850), 20 Jun 1908, p. 4

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% a SE PSE BP NR nS I SR a gts gr Set » PAGE FOUR With a Lawn Weeder] No More Broken Backs This Little Gets At The Root of the Evil And Removes It Bodily, Only 75c. Only at GOABEIT'S CTY TTITI IIT ITTV UTE Device 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 S. ANGLIN & C0. Foot of Wellington Sr eg x | discredited American Oils Coal Oil Lubricating Oils Gasoline We make a Frigid of na dling Prices on application. W./F. KELLY & CO., South Cor. Ontario and Clarence. A Sh GASOLINE 20c.; PER GALLON Put in your tank at our Dock. We always have in stock Spark Coils, Spark Plugs, Columbia Dry Batter. ies, eto. Repairs promptly attended to. Selby & Youlden, Ltd, Kingston Foundry. "Town Over-- "ow gtun mm: frum ghd sod aPARY BRITISH WHIG, published at 308 greet. | Eton, Contes at $6 per WEEKLY BRITIoN whic 16 pages, pub Jahed in on en 20d Thursday mora- 8 year. To States, for er Te buted Siew Saree Dailv Whig OUR LOVING FRIENDS, The most charmingly ingehuous and affectionate article read in Kingston in many 8 day appeared in last evening's conservative journal, which in ite misrepresentation of the liberal dinate in false charges and assump- tions had but two weeks before es tablished , legitimate succession of the The atmosphere has marvellously changed. It is not can News. » {three weeks since men who have been associgtes of Mr. Pense for years in a hundred private public and church activities, including wholesale mer- chants, lawyers, and doctors, would not permit him to reply in peace, as was his right for ten minutes, to his opponent's bitter personal attack. The hoots, boo-boos and insults were be- gun by the representative etonserva+ tives of Kingston, seatell on the plat- form, as indecent an exhibition as the city has ever seen, but which had been repeated by 'we party of gentle men' at three preceding nominations. The liberals, on the last as on pre- ceding occasions, gave no ground of offence save that they were in the way of these gentlemen are "se sorry it was Pense that was defeated--it was for the party, you know." Liberal workers, 'who could not be passed by rivals without conservative aspirations. Now their. conservative a frown or a jeer, are being met and gl- most lovingly embraced. It is all very strange to them until they reflect that the conservatives have a very guilty conscience on the protest question, as to their charity towards Mr. Pense in that very line, and respecting their bribery performances, which have "'out:-Heroded Herod." The editor of the Standard feels that if he had been here in 1905 he would have opposed the Mclutyre pro- test. That argument. is vaporous moonshine. The consdrvative organ would have, as usual, Melved in for all it was worth, before and after the and all through the subsequent election. 'There is nothing in its re- cent course to encourage, in the slight- 6.1, its rise above the level of the bitterest partizanship, in which King stof has had, for hall a century, a distinguished, if not tne leading, Can- adian place. There is no precedent in local polities for a representative con- servative rising above his party and fair-play aod friendly consideration. For the bye-electiom of 1906 almost every leading conserva: tive, nearly all persons receiving asy- lum patronage or holding a license gave a contribution to the tory fund, and every worker did his very best. They did not reason over the fair- conditions of the preceding fight, the ungenerous side of their action. They had their opponents at a dis- advantage from the possession of the government and its attractions to city constituencies. 'I'he bribery ar- rangement alone saved the liberal can- didate from expulsion from the House, an arrangement that the conserva tives refused to repew last month be- cause they know they were going to deluge the sub-divisions with money. Before Pense and Melntyre were nominated in 1904, W. F; Nickle pre- dicted a Whitney triumph, to be fol- lowed by a protest against My. Pense if elected. On the day following the election, before members of his fam- ily, he assured the latter that they (the conservatives) had done their very worst and that conditions had been so well balanced there would be no protest. Yet he was one of the zealous planners throughout the pro- test, and his manner of czoss-exam- ination was the least forgettable ele- ment of the trial. Now the paper he owns in part, for which he was chiefly instrumental in purchase nego- tiations, is all swee and light, love and . benediction. 1t would be more respected had it refrained from party with the veil of recent trial, proclaiming or covering its hypocrisy. The protest against liberals was based, in public utterances, upon lofty motives. 1f they were in order them, these impulses are called for now ten was wide open and Nickle men were treat: ing all day long, a doubly illegal act; THE WHIG, 75th , YEAR '{sufirage movement among the so | will beiseen of the Hyde park demon- THE PATH OF DUTY. "The choies of Mr. Taft by the re publicans for the presidency of the United States #is according to the eternal fitness of things. J8 may scem absurd, but it is declared to be a truth nevertheless, that this big genial, eapable man has never been a self seeker, that all the honors that {have coms to him are rewards for duty well done. The calls from ome place to shother, from a lower to a higher, have followed his qualifica- tion for the change. He is like his prototype in dhis re spect, but be differs in manner and method. Taft will not be as talka- tive as Roosevelt or as demonstrative, but he will be judicial in his treat. ment of public questions, and when he gives a decision it will be founded on justice and equity. He is the legiti timate successor of the virile Mr. Roosevelt, because he has shared with the president in his plans, policies and ideals, with regard to national gov- ernment, dhe big stick may not be quits so much in evidence, but the big figure will be there, representing a dogility and determination in char- acter so seldom conspicuous in the one individual. Mr. Taft is in the prime of life. Next September he will be fifty-one, He has been devoted to the practice of the law, and has been a judge in Cincinnati on two occasions, As _solici- tor-general he served under the Har- rison government. If he had any am- bition it was to become a judge of the supreme court, but President McKin- ley sent him to the Philippines to President Roosevelt called him home to supervisy the war department. He accepted every call to office as a mat- ter of duty, and Roosevelt put a whole chapter inwa few words when he said, "Taft is. the biggest going concerw in the country." Everything noble and worthy Nis conspiring to make the secretary of war the next president of the United States, and he is simply accepting the duty that is laid upon him, amd us- ing, in the interest of the country, his splendigd 'mental equipment and]: experience in a very satisfactory way. He deserves the honor, the highest the people can confer, for the service he has already given the nation in many irked capacities. C Saturday Night expresses the gene- [\ ral feeling that Mr. Whitney would have been better off with a majority of twenty-five. "A few ambjtious men among his followers, uniting in a cause," says our contemporary, 'can prove more formidable and dan- gerous than' the opposition,' which is true, as Mr. Whitney may live to learn. ASSERTING THEMSELVES. There is a difference of opinion to the attitude of the imperial ol as gov- movement. silly women has been enough to make the government resist the demand with a relentless hatred, and the alleged "surrender" of the premier is a mys- a deved ? His anpouncement in the commons, following the Manchester election, was simply that in the re- vision of the election law. the gov- ernment would not oppose the pro- posal to give the women votes. Mr, Asquith is not committed to the proposition." Neither is any of his colleagues. The movement has gained in im- petuosity through the fact that many of the better class of women have en- gaged in it, the educated, the socially influential, the attractive, in manner and dress. It has lost in popularity through the excesses of some persors. These resorted to despicable means in order to challenge public attention, became , nuisance at public meetings by their disturbances, and invited the ignominy of arrest without a reasom. So far have they gone in their ag- gressiveness that there has been a re- flex action, and the National Wo: man's Anti-Suffrage Association is the |; result: Tt is a powerful organization which aims at counteracting the ef- sence its members say that the place of the women is in the home, and that 'the men can be safely left to the @ ir political rights, with all ¢ responsibilities which these rights imply. There is a strong opposition to the ialists, the 14k ites, the 3 4 and liberals. The unionists are asked to make it a party question, and to resist it with the solid' force of the party. The party in power is prob- ably as much against the extengion of the franchise as the party which is out of power. It is simply inclined commons, and when it is the effect Ontario, thought of the electors" and the influences that pre- judiced them, introduce civil government there, and the commons as soon as possible. refornt' of the pendent commission cannot begin too soon, elaborate affair, is calculated time being to be brought under outside reforming than the inside service ? vice reform under ment ? It should be a plank in I appeal to the support of all classes. ? Ww convention. audacious, of right at any cost. other, Roosevelt in that respect ? Then why the difference in the popular re- gard let up any scandal or slander, complains that he is a sufferer from the politi- cal pamphlet. siderate himself he can expect the fa- " ways. or pleasing to "blurt out' one's opin- fect of the suffrage clamour. In es- |ions, likes or dislikes, was candid in his dealings with men, and he was not speech is not always a passport public favour. SPIRT OF THE PRESS = Not FAIR TO MR. MACKAY. The Canadian editor of Collier's is not just im his criticism of the late provincial election. He says the deci: sion of the electors, among other things, means "'that the liberals were unwise io pin their faith to an un: popular leader, with a policy mostly consisting of two spots.™ The liberals have no apology to of- fer for their choice of a leader ip He may be young and in- experienced, when his service is coni- pared with that of some men on the government side of the house, but he i® not unpopular. Liberal sentiment is pretty unanimous :in declaring that hs made a brilliant campaign, and that he did his duty whatever may be "free and independent His policy was not confited to the CG. N, R, guarantee and the La Rose Mining deal, though these were con- spicuous in the discussions every- where. The public ownership pro- gramme, the talk of cheap power and the gerrymander, had a good deal to do with the result of the election. Collier's refers to two of these, but it:ignores the gerrmander, and it will be found eventually that it more than anything else, (excepting boodle), had to do with the stituencics, EDITORIAL NOTES. Judge Mmedonald, at the Pan-Ancli- result in mimy con- can Congress, said that prohibition ip Canada was a failure. Is that so? should The civil service bill Pass The service under an inde- The republican platiorm is not an but every plank in it to appeal to the elec- tor's sense of safety, Roosevelt boss- ed its construction. the the ivil service act, and why not ? Is the service any less in need The outside service is not for of When is Ontario to have civil ser the local govern- the beral platform. It is one that will Restitation, that is the word, Every man, whether the maker of a patent- ed article or not, should be made to refund every dollar he has wrongfully xtracted from the government trea- sury. The civil service commissioners will be selected with a view to their effi-1 ciency and ability. They must be ise and discreet 'men, to use their power aright, ------ It was stupid of the Ottawa Jour- ernment towards the woman's suffrage {nal to refer to' the boots of the in- The misconduct of some |lantry militia men contemptuously znd enquiré who the contractor was. The apology was necessarily abject nd complete. ---- The Witness has no sympathy with tery of the hour. But has he.surren- |, \.. 1 iy the sufferings they en- dure on account of deficient deputy returning officers, however, for these odd jobs at the wages that are going. hard, men It is pretty to pick up competent Hughes unpopular at the Chicago Why ? He is fearless, independent, an advocate Is he not an- { them ? ---- Mr. Foster, who is never happy un- saucing some one, and backing When he is more con- our of his critics. According to Mack, of Saturday Night, Mr. Whitney is a politician ai- ter whom all rising young men in public life will want to pattern their The idea is that it is popular Mr. Mackepzie thanked. Plain to Guelph Mercury. More good men go to the bad good times than in bed times--and some go all the time, to let the issue be discussed in the | MOngers Some There's always some out of the rut. we can't give you a It's a revelation to See Our Genteel Gray St See Our Special Homespun and Halifax T Our Suits are always different. Come in and try on some of the new comers. If § "made-to-order" fit and a "made-to-order" tailoring style We Won't Take Your Money. readily we can meet their every requirement. i See Our Swell Brown Suits See Our Nobby Blue Suits | See Our Fancy Worsted Suits | £8.50 Two-Piece Suits of See our Straw Hat display, $1.00. Snap. snap to our Suits. We're some men to see how its $15.00: weeds. THE H. D. BIBBY CO. £7 / 74 ntmos irritating the face. The Gillette Safety Basor consists of a triple silver blades, in velvet lined leather case, Price §5-- atall Sporting Goods and Department Stores. Writs ite If he cannot supply you, write us, (& for alight shave, a soft beard, a medium beard, a closeshave or a very close shave. SF And the 'Gillette Razor shaves with the A LS 7 Bb \GYAY This shows a remnant of steel ribbon from which "Gillette blades have great success of the "Gillette" Safety Razor has been due to these little wafers of steel, Por their size, they have more shaving edge than any other razor -- old 'fashioned or , steel is hardened to the degree that it will cut glass, like a diamond. Yet the finished blades are so flexible that they can be bowed in the fingers, are regulated in the razor t ease ang comfort and without plated holder aid 12 double edged flexible leading Jewelry, Drug, Cutlery, Hardware, e or ask your dealer for free booklets, Sette a 5alel Canadian Steanboreir Home Grown Hot-House Tomatoes, California Cherries, A.J.REES, 166 Princess St © os eer lo) - speci: scribing territory; KINGSTON ®@ PEMBROKE RAILWAY IN CONNECTION WITH Canadian Pacitic Railway a Dominion Day Round Trip Tickete will he sold at SINGLE FARE Good going June 30th, and Ju lat, Good for return until Jaly 264d, Tos: a HOMESEEKERS' EXCURSION To Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberts, 7th, amd in 60 days K. & P, and CO. 1, Phoue, 80, ¥. CONWAY, Gen. Passy Agent. bnein OF QUINTE RAILWAY union station, Ontario Jeaves MRrest, i Gaily ad Napaven: Saonpled, XS inte a Bannock. ral TT ous Lower St. St. Lawrence Gaspe Peninsular Maritime Provinces All reached by the INTERCOLONIAL RAILWAY Dining and Sleaping Car equipment), Fishing, Bathing, Boating, Shooting. *TOURY x0, BUMMER quo special ra " tours, lot pnmplete id (Excellent Write for HAUNTS,s al ----d Montreal City Office, 141 St. James Strest. or General Passenger Department, MONCTON, N.B. RAILWAY EL DREULLSSESIT DOMINION DAY, 1908 Round trip tiskets will Pe sold from Kingston to all stations in Canada an and Port Huron, Mich, . Niagara Falis, Jouses Point and + lsland Pond and in the United States at Single First-Class Fare Good going Tuesday and Wednesday, June «80th and July 1st Good return jug on or before Thursday, - July 2nd, New One-Way Fares to the Can~ adian Northwest Via Chicago In efféct June 14th, 1908, 1st. 20d, Class Class Winnipe, Regina .. Edmonton And all points in C Janadian North-West For pullman accommodation, tickets and any other information, apply to J P. BANLEY, Agent, Corner Johnson and Ostario Sts. Quebec Steamship Company LIMITED, }, River & Gulf of St. Lawrence Summer Cruises in Cool Latitudes ' -------- Twin BSerew Irom 88, "Campana,™ with electric lights, elecizic bells and all | Plums & Apricots | ! Phone 58. li oo 4 i Booth & Co. Phone 133 Foot of West St AS. MULLEN, Granite and Marble Works FirstClass Work Suarantd De Anrured. Tou oa ompt- Executed, OOOOH HO, FOR A HOLIDAY! DAILY TO KINGSTON, MILLS. The Commodious' Sfr. Ecelewat| WILL MAKE DAILY < ¥ STOR RIES aril Prey KING. Juaving CRAWFORD'S Wharf, toon Hoel incoss St., 9 a.m., 2.30 and 4.30 pam. | POE leave Kingston Mills, 10 » 3.30 an £) Im Lo 3 &r each "ig, daily, Jaye and Saturdays we pr 's | . Leaving Kivgeton 7.80 a.m. Round Trip Tickets 25c., ati used for any wat able Sates. Shifts es = Frelghi sito car ag rain; GPO, aan. Torn Engine . D DURGA Gost, Peat, Ti i ir - ALLAN 55 i LINE == MouTHEAL ih ho yoy 11. Fons daly # rs i Zo BAYER AXD ane 27 Sept 28, dune 37 and full tnforme~ ly : 2 Princess St Orposits ¥. M. O. A. |€ alling at Quebec, Perce | and Charlottetown, modern comfort TRAILS FROM MONTREAL ON MON- { DAYS, at 4 pan., IVLh June, 13th and 27th July, 10th and 24th Angust, 7th and 21st September, for Pictou, N MN Bay, A Mal rE] Grand ver, Suthuieraide, PEL NEW YORK FROM FROM QUEBEC Mie ara Charlottetown pad Halifax, 2,600 tons, le from 1 a Toth July, etn and 200d August, Bermuda Summer Racursions, $10 and upwards the Twin « ""Bermu . Jor tickets 4 sateroo HANWL! | Rack, Ticket Lake Ontario & Bay of Quinte Steamboat Co, LIMITED. KINGSTON, ROCHESTER, 1,000 ISLANDS. stom Ont. Str. NORTH KING. aves King. pointe on Sun- SWIFY & Coy I err 8, 'Wm. Murray, Auctioneer 27 BROCK ST. New Carriages, Cutters, Harness ste., for sale Sale of Horses yruy Saturday.

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