Daily British Whig (1850), 8 Oct 1908, p. 4

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ve THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, THURSDAY. OCTOBER 8, 1908. WORK FOR HIM T0 D0 'BEST THING THAT CAN HAPPEN CANADA PAGE FOUR. FAS ree: THE WHIG, 75th YEAR Night Light DAILY BRITISH WHIG, published at MORE WILD TALK. rowful wail of the manuiacturers ring-4 Hon. R. L. Porden, opposition lead- ing in his ears. The veteran warrior | the has lived to see the manufacturing in- dustries of Canada enjoydpg a pros- purity which dwarfs into insignificance hat "of the early days of the N.P. BELL EPPIEFL EHP LAE oy Lier WRIRE 306-310 King street, Kingston, Ontario, er, did not win approbation at Che H PD. Bibb Co. : a TT Year "ditions at 2.30 en conservative meeting in the city hall . . v . x : WEEKLY BRITISH WHIG, 16 pages, a rent t % published in parts on Monday and Thurs- last evening when he proceeded id * . day morning at $1 a year. To United paint Sir Wilirid Laurier and Hon. . States, charge for postage hess to & The Best Night Light in the Market. . Cost for 18 Hours 1%c. Cost of Lamp, 33c Corbett's. BE EEE OVERCOATS Light Fall well-lined A Beaver at $10 As good as a $20 tailor-made coat. Come in and see the style, the fit, the It will surely please Penman's Fleece-Lined Underwear $1 34 14 ISAAC ZACKS, 271 Princess St. --------------------------------. A se -- 8 Bools and Shoes Spring Coats, Winter Coats and Heavy finish you Suits. Sizes to | Portland Cement Better have that con- crete work done before winter sets in. Send us your order for Portland Cement. Highest grade, guar- anteed quality. Our booklets tell you how to use it. ANGLIN'S LUMBER YARD Cor. Bay & Wellington Sts. Ladies High-Class Taloing DOMINION GARMENT CO., Limited. MADE-TO-ORDER COATS, SKIRTS AND SUITS. OUR GUARANTEE : ordered from us, which may be re We will alter make vou a your nL. ney REMEMBER all ours--Not 3 Any garment entirely I'he J. G. Patterson, Agent 120 risk is nurs Johnson street "IF YOU WANT TO BUY, RENT OR SELL REAL ESTATE I make a specialty of same. Drop a card or call on me. No trouble to show property. Insur- ance at lowest rates. Money to loan. GEO. CLIFF, Real Estate valuatior, 95 Clarence street. etc., at - Cory nT FRESHLY MINED Coal is far more desirable than that dug out of the earth a year ago. It's cleaner--hasn"t stored up twelve months' dirt and dust it's dryer and in many ways a greater heat producer. Here it is at your service on quick order-- bright, well screened coal in all the standard sizes at standard prices for better even than stand- and quality. R. CRAWFORD "Phone, §. Foot Queen St. added, making price of Daily $3 and | Weekly $1.50 per year. Attached is one of the best Job Print- . ing Offices in Canada ; rapid, stylish, men of cunning and roguery, who and cheap work ; nine improved presses. |. 11 nt be allowed to be at large, The British Whig Polishing Co., re but should be placed in one of Hon. ¥D¥. Managing Director. W. J. Hanna's Institutions for formation... Mr. Bordén hadn't good word to say for the liberal gov- ernment. He dealt with a few of his seandal stories and --eriticized every department of the government, but he failed to great things done by the Laurier ad- A THOUGHT FOR ELECTORS. ministration or to the prosperity What will the electors say of men the country. Unless he got. into pow- who disposed of 29,322 square miles er at once there would be blue ruin of timber while in office, at an aver- for Canada. Some of his harsh re- age of $3.13 per square mile ? !ferences to Sir Wilfrid Laurier were What will the electors say of men met with hisses here and there, and who disposed of 23,000 square miles deserved nothing The opposi- of 'timber without getting any pensation for the treasury ? 'What will the electors say of men | years who divided among themselves when tacks on in power 10,326 square miles of tim- [ters do him no credit. A. Claude Macdonnell's reference to | the government was decidedly out of to the place. For a man tc say that the never South American republics had cleaner of W. S. Fielding as black as black could be. To him they seem to be re- one TORONTO OFFICE. Suite 19 and 20, Queen City Cham- bers, 382 Church St., Toronto, H. E. | Smallpeice, Representative. Daily Wibig. pet of less. speaker since he visited Kingston five ago, but his uncalled-for at- the premier and his minis- ber in one year, without paying a | cent for it? What will the electors say iberal government which has sold a mile of timher since it came government than Canada was a slur | nto power except at public competi- {upon his native land, and he ought to | tion and to 'the highest bidder ? {be ashamed. D. M. McIntyre's short ------------------ address, on the tests that should be | NOT HEARING THINGS. to was inter- | The Montreal Star has a man on |esting, and we commend it to Mr. the street who does not hear now of | Borden for him to follow out. If he | some things that were talked so much applied Mr. McIntyre's tests | of a while ago. One thing, ho does not | would not paint Sir Wilfrid Laurier | discuss--the land Mr. Fielding villains. The | Mr. in financing | courage Mr. Borden displays the fortunes of conservative platform is minified by his failure, in re- applied governments, he | large part which a cer- as tain the party. took the Graham on the house of commons, with due There has been some controversy sponsibility of his acts, to lay against any minister crown. That's the test; talk den and Mr. Graham, but there has ide will not go with thinking been no dispute that in the last elec- ple. 1i he knows of wrongdoing tions Mr. Graham put thousands of | and his should move dollars the campaign. Why ? | the proper place. What did he expect to get out of it? It that ing financial backer the the of the thing. One who makes his money carefully is not for no purposes. Moreover, some time ago the Montreal Star the part the wealthy man should play any of the out- and dispute as to the meaning of cer- | charges tain letters passing between Mr. Bor- peo- he colleagues in into EDITORIAL NOTES. Borden should have more faith his is assumed he was not act- the for R. L. his as of " party fun in fellowmen--especially in fellow grits. apt to give it away in-thousands the man Kingston needs in parliament. His business sagacity | is sought for the making of a larger | Harty is discoursed upon : --e Canada. in the political counsels of his coun- try. The That subject has been dropped, pre- backing of sumably because the new election law |poration. does not take pleasant cognizance of tant as it was in the The man the x 1 that | Mr. Sifton a a yO * b y . : ; g ing defeat to Hon. T. ing, and of profound interest to the ple remember the marked Mr. Daly's administration the interior department. night was has the | railway cor- | conservative party the C.P.R. It will likely be as impor- 1904 ! weaithy man. in rn 5 will administer a crush- | M. Daly, incapacity street has not heard is Peo- | which | of man whom he adores. HAS BUILT UP WEST. Some conservative campaign orators Mr. to Kingston, and yet Last Borden's first | are very fond of telling the people political visit that the policy of the Laurier govern- {not even a houquet of flowers was pre- ment, which has done so much for the sented to him by his followers. "Twill development of Canada as a whole, be a lemon he'll get on October 26th, and of the west especially, has been Mr. gentleman, Borden is a nice man and a had at the cost of Ontario, and to they their too, delight in trying convince but he is too pessi- and Mr. an mistic. Canada is going ahead, hearers that the government has been things are bright ior the future. they have been Borden to optimist. more solicitous about bringing: in . ol H ry and become foreign-born'"' than should try a in persuading native Canadians go and settle in the west. Mr. Metealie told the city hall au- In this case, as in se.many others, dience last evening that Mr. Borden is says the Ottawa Free Press, the facts the "'coming premier' of Canada. aud figures give the lie to the tory \qya¢ might meah ten or fifteen years « ampailgner Ss. The ment 1896, hence. It certainly will not be in the 1908. records of the interior depart- July 1st, ao fewer year that between y sins and June 30th, 1903, 36,812 in Ontario show - If Ross did reach parliament he for what than people born benefits" could secure King- took up homesteads in the western ston irom a liberal government ? The Laurier government is a ywinner and everybody in Canada who follows the provinces. The figures are : From July 1 to December 31, ROG . Seetssese messsssrsessrean " 160 IBYT vivian sears 455 1898 ) 1899 1900 .......... . € 1901 sesarisen J. 1902 ¢ 7 1903 1904 1905 vear 1906 year 1907 | six months 1008 political game concedes it. June the Metcalfe when Ww. P election. Last 'alendar alendar alendar 'alendar 'alendar 'alendar year year year year year year year year year Last tory shouters froze H. opposition to in the they he came out Nickle, night ry in Ontario 90 : : : . 50 received him with great acclaim, and What a change! 7 . 1002 'alendar 0 'alendar jslendar 370 | laughed at his jokes. 1,521 of calendar year senssenaranes Standard was loud it was to King- 36,812 These are striking figures, but they tell the the part which Ontario has taken in the building up" of the west. In 1901 the Ontario-born population Last June the in its contention that ston's benefit to have a tory at To- ronto. Following the same line it should shout loudly for Hasty so that have the right mem- of do not whole story of Kingston might . x ber at Ottawa in view Laurier's ir Manitoba and what is now Sas- katchewan and Alberta numbered 95, 705: in 1906 it had grown to 163,962, coming victory. An esteemed contemporary refers to Mr. Borden as "the man of the hour." Just But Canada re- the quires for the great work which she an increase in five years of 68,167. than that, while the total of western provinces was in 1906, has 'on hand a premier who is some- the numbered Further SO. (Canadian-born population three 166,611, 163,962. So that Ontario-born more than a man of an hour. himself the thing Premier Laurier has shown the man for the country prosperity and' population, past twelve years. Let him finish his to the development of while Ontario herself has during grown in largely owing work. The net result of the wise and ag- immigration policy of the to transform empty thousands of square and to create the west, that development has been largely done by her own people, with the inevitable effect of providing fresh gressive markets for the factories of their na- liberals has been tive province. prairies into Compare this record with that prior miles of wheat fields, thriving cities and towns where only gophers and prairie Well has it been said government were ) not to 1896, when the young and enter- people of Ontario were going long ago United States, and ask your- chickens dwelt. : a. . a that iT the Laurier to be judged alone on its immigration prising to the self whether it is "time for change." Do years when vou want to go back to the polity, the honest verdict of the peo the sons of Ontario were | ple could not be otherwise than in its deserting their native land by the favor. > thousand each vear to go to an alien a Ee ee Sir Charles Tupper attacked the first Fielding tariff when it appeared in 1897, predicted that it would ruin the industries of red that he already' heard the sor- land, or will yon stand by the policy which develops Canada by Cana- dans ? han de. Canada, and Overcoats dyed or pressed. My Valet. refer to any of the | * : 2.3 com- | tion leader has improved asa public | | school inspector for this district, is in | town again this week engaged in the | | one | Montreal road race to he held | nett, Sydenham | Britton. Everett Wallace, who has been | street, | Kingston; C. | ton, Springfield, Mass. | spending the summer with her parents { Mr. He has lived to see the last Fielding tarifi adopted by the house of mons without a division. Is the Return of Sir Wilfrid, Laurier to Power--He is in a Grand Position to Carry Out His Ideals, ; Toronto Globe. : ' The citizen who looks calmly over | the political prospects for the next few years must come to the condu- | sion that the best thing that could | + hay --Canada at this juncture is | { that Sir Wilfrid Laurier should be re- | turned to power with an ample work- | ing majority. The more he considers | Seng, dain fy go ous 11 th ers onvne B witgh ht | One and one-hali days' work and | __: : : {one and one-half days without water | reject. the services of a man so peeuli- | and circumstanced to | is the record for the first half of this arly po im om, the benef | | week, and no better is expected from { best rears of i life . d mefit of the | the last half. If the dry season con-'| der 3 four th h y BRC. We are un- | tinues here © much longer the local : made ear that the mistake will be | | manufacturers will _have to bestir re: t ; ' . i | themselves to fill their orders. has Sir at ny, Period, of his career | Work has been started on the foun- osits id t ME Joeen. 1h 30 good a | dation for the new wareroomis of ihc P si ion 0 sary out his ideals as he | | D. F. Jones Manufacturing company, = as oe his duty i he | | which when completed will zive 8 feont ie Gi pe he wor. begun at | | Siorage Sapacity of several thousand a give Sands 21 | dozen more vels. : ¥ } ow, 54 The ay os Clara arrived great nationhood, and to be remem- from Oswego last evening with a car- Jered with approval for his services go. Wiliam Johnston, Athens, public ee hh on hese | motives. { Even his potions foes do not | charge him with sordid or unworthy | objects. Some of the greatest public | { men have been wa by the lust for { power. That passion has but little hold on his philosophic mind~It may easily be believed that it is not what | | Carlyle calls "'antecedency of his fel- | low-man" that holds him true to his | task. He is held to a task which has many disagreeable features by his be- Gan- lief that he can be of use to his fel- Sneque, long distance runner wir ner Howcitigens. oS here ire not rid of the long distance events here on | : ae 1 a Dominion day, and in Kingston on Shel Win ot ull Rrejudice, Wiuid Labor dey, will in all probability be pi A rr the finishing of tha "oik ka 0 © ps is > g oi ) 2 2 at he contestants in tix hig has in hand, there are a set of ques- | tions arising which, although' not so | : 3 ) liable to fire the popular imagination | See Our Grosvenor English Raincoats, good rain or shine, as the Grand Trunk Pacific or the | - $12.50. Hudson's Bay railway, nevertheless ! * come very near to men's business and | uits bosoms. The establishment of a eivil See Our English Worsted Suits, Blue or Black, $12.50 and service commission, following the re- | port of the investigating commission, set in motion a reform which will go | farther, and which will indeed not | cease until our public services are on * the same footing as those in Britain. | t com- | TIDINGS FROM GANANOQUE. | Long Distance Runner For Montreal Race. Gananoque, Oct. 8,--Quite a goodly number went to Athens to attend the |' meeting of Hon. W. 8S. Fielding, fin- ance minister and George P. Graham, minister of railways and canals. "The Tyranny of Tears" was pre- | sented at the Grand Opera House last Entered : + + You Can't Go Wrong on Fall Clothes, Here! We went to the best tailors we know or that anybody else knows. They built for us from fabrics we selected, and in the painstaking way we dictated. The best garments it is possible to make. Garments right "up lo snuff" in every way. Overcoats See Our Dressy Chamberlain $12.50, $15 $a. See Our Nobby Clarendon, $15, $18 and $20, See Our Swag; Westminster, $10, $12.50, $15. See Our Coll n, $12.50, $15, $18, See Our Genteel Chesterfield, Silk Faced, $12.50, $15 and inspection of the various departments of the public schools. The coal schooner 'Horace Taber, Captain Frank Barnhart, arrived on Wednesday afternoon with a cargo' Samuel McCammon, town clerk, has a gang of men engaged at his proper- ty on Main street, preparing the foundation for a handsome residence which he purposes erecting. Robert O'Brien, Stone street, Raincoats Thanksgiving day. Among those from in the excursion to New York city were Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Abbott, South street; My. and Mrs. J. Belfie, Pine street; Mr. and Jlrs. T. W. Ben- street, and R. H. town who took $15 located here for some months past, left, yesterday, for Toronto, where he has secured a situation. Mrs. H. C. Taylor, Stone 'street, is spending "a few weeks in Kingston, the guest of her mother, Mrs. N. Wilmot. The following ave visiting in town : Mrs. Joseph Kenny and son, Jones' Falls, with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John McArdle, First street. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Denny, Clayton, N.Y., for a couple of weeks, with the latter's sister, Mrs. F. Battams, Wellington See Our Semi-Ready Blues and Black, $20. See Our Handsome Brown Suits, $15, $18. See Our New Tweed Suits, $10, $12 and $15. BIBBY'S FOR THE BEST $2.00 HATS THE BEST $1.00 GLOVES THE BEST $1.00 SHIRTS THE BEST 50c. CAPS THE BEST $1.00 UNDERWEAR 4, THE BEST 25¢c. CASHMERE . HOSIERY The H. D. Bibby Co. There is an immense work to be done | in this direction. The doing of it will | be by no means easy. Abuses of one | kind or another have always doughty | battalions fighting against their abo- | lition. They die hard. Who likely | to give them the final coup de grace | as the man who started the move- | ment, and who' possesses the sirengih, | all be requirpd in bearing down the | 80 IN CANADA. The town following spent some time in this week: F. Kirkpatrick, A. Larkin, Toronto; W. J. Anderson, London; T. CC. Boutil- lier, Westmount, Montreal; A. C. Dut- The following visitors in town have returned home : Mrs. Walker, after +4494 and Mrs. Reid, Charles street, to Chicago. Louis Bedard to Schenec- tady, N.Y. W. Anglin to Gouverneur, N.Y. Mrs. Schoenleber, to New York city, after spending the summer with her sister, Mrs. E. E. Belnois, King street, Mrs. F. Hunt and Mrs. Mack to Potsdam, N.Y. The following who have been visit- ing out of town have returned : Miss Florence Baker, King street, from Watertown and «Geneva, N.Y. Mrs. IL Lalonde, King street, and daugh- ter, from Clayton, -N.Y. Miss Lilhan Hogan, Stone street, from Brockville. Mr. and Mrs. John Lasha, Charles street, from spending the summer at Chafiey's Lock : Flossie Me- | Avany, Charles street, Northern New York. Miss Design For Street Costume. authority, and experience which will selfish interests which would maintain | the hoary-headed evils of the past ? | It would not be easy to exaggerate | the value of authority and experience in such a struggle. To effect the radi- | A cal and in many quarters unwelcome | $ changes required will call for some one | who, if need be, would act alone. ls| ¥+¢44<4 there anyone in the field of Canadian | politics who is in this position save | Sir Wilfrid Laurier ? | Civie service reform and all the re- | forms that are kindred to it should | be undertaken by the reform party Phere is nothing before the country to-day that is more important, and | whatever the result of the election on October 26th, it\yis a subject that must be «pressed and not forgotten in the | multitude of other things that en- | gage attention in a young and grow- | . ing country. Sir Wilfrid Laurier in the ripeness of his powers, in the | We have the most complete assortment strength of his patriotism, and in the | fulness of his authority over the liber- | of the most up-to-date Footwear to be al party and the country, is the | . . . . chosen man to revolutionize the whole found in America, including all the newest system of offi¢e-holding and depart- 3 3 mental administration wherever it Canadian and American patterns. needs revolutionizing. { Dying and cleaning. My Valet. | Red Shoes, South Il.eeds liberals nominated W. | '. Fredenburgh for the House of Tan Shoes, Commons. { h 1 w ; Brown Shoes, A Wise Mother's Story Patent Shoes, Let all mothers and daughters G Metal Sh read carefully and profit by it. | un [Vleta oes In Laced and Button Effects for Men and Women. Also a complete stock of Women's Spats and Overgaiters in Fawn, Brown, Blue. , Purple, Red, and Green. Also many styles of Black in Low, Medium, and High Lengths. PENDABLE 2E'SHoES --- > FARHAN SC 2 é Chinese Laundry Ladies' and Gentlemen :--Please send me your washing, also tell your friends. Goods called for and delivered ; prices reasonable. DUN KEE, Cor. Barrie and Brock streets. + "lI am convinced," writes Mrs. A | B. Hopeford from St. John, "that a | majority of the young girls who die | of consumption do so because their mothers neglected their health at ie | critical time when carefulness insures 4 vigor and sound health. If a girl's} health is neglected from her eleventh | to sixteenth year her body will be | weak and she becomes a ready victim of typhoid, anaemia, and in many | cases consumption itself. In her six- | teenth year my youngest daughter | showed signs of failing strength. | Some dyspeptic troubles developed, | her heart became weak and palpita- | The drawing shows a very smart | tion frightened her dreadfully. She | costume for street wear, the coat hav- | was irregular in the important bodily | ing the newest features of the season. | functions and rapid loss in a weight | The model was in black broadcloth, | and a ruddy complexion pointed to with satin revers and satin passemen- | rapid decline. terie buttons, but the model is also She disliked making her troubles especially well adapted to soft flat known to wur doctor, a feeling 1 felt fur, such as pony skin or caracul. The | [ should respect, and so by good for- skirt of the gown was in walking | tune I was led to use Ferrozone with length, in a gored circular, and the | most gratifying results. My Neighbor sleeves were small and fitted without | next door, Mrs. Woods, had found fullness into the armhole. Ferrozone so goid in nervousness that re she persuaded me that it would re NEW MACHINE SHOP. A call is invited for all ki of goer manutacturing and machine chal he have Whe only machine in the city for this purpove)--r ing guns, is, dies; g, model and og Best of attention §iven work, gakrs may be dS ore paving guaranteed. outside ly attended to, Charges moderate. Nothing Better Made. | store Flossie's health, and from the You not only get the most but the time the second box was commenced best remedy when you buy Smith's | her improvement wa# constant She is White Liniment. Nothing better can a big, strong girl, ruddy and be had, or can be made, at any price | plump, able to study hard and to take | while at 25c. you get the largest bot- | her share of household duties. 1 am tle of liniment on the market at. the | an earnest advocate of Ferrozone. We price. Cures rheumatism, lumbago | all use it now as a tonic as it is cer- and all aches and pains. At Wadd giaini woman's best friend. drug store. ww) All dealers sell Ferrozone, Bic. per box or six boxes for $2.50; procure a supply to-day. now THE FRONTENAC LOAN AND INVESTMENT SOCIETY ESTABLISHED, 1863. President---Sir Richard Cart ht. Money issued on Cit and Farm FPro- perties. Municipal an County Deben- tures. Mortgages purchased. Deposits received and interest allowed, IF IT 1S T0 GET A SINK Set up or a bath room installed. I can do it nn first-class style and at the right price. Give me a trial. DAVID HALL, Phonc 335, 64 Brock 8! St, (near Princess) Ki Delivery. CABS! The Old Stand and The Old Num-~ Phone -------------- Fall Importations Of 1908. Prevost, Brock street, has received all fall importations for order work | in his tailoring department. His rea- | Wood's Phosphodin, dy-made clothing and gents furnish- | The Great nervous i old eis ing departments were never better as- sorted. 2 ee | ous Povitity, Mental and Brain . " pondency, We Emissions, At Fort Frances, a young home- | Sos baa and Effects of Duse gr , steader, James Simpson, died fronf $1 per box, six six for logk-jaw following a wound in the pl dl a The Medicine Co. foot, caused by the accidental dis- | Baden Boing 6 owt. charge of a shot gun. mak Re- shop. prompt: J. W. HUNTER, Machinist, 30 Montreal Orders taken at Simmons Bros. and A. Vanluven's Parcel

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