PAGE FOUR. The Best Night Light in the Market. Cost for 18 Hours viC. rh Cost of Lamp, 35¢ Corbett's. tex Headache and relieve all tho troubles fned Jeet to a jillous state of the system, such af fraziness, Nausea, Drowsinecs, Distress aftes vaiing. Pain in the Side, kc. While their most MATA e success bad been shown In ouriag SICK a hohe, yot Carter's Little Liver Filo are ty valuable in Conatipation, ¢ 1 i mplaint, wh they also rd of thestomach stimnlatatha # vo and regulate the bowels, Even if they only ~~ HEAD Ye sathey would bealmost priceless to thosowhe 5 fer from this distressing complaint: but fortue vately theirgoodness does notend here, and those ®hooneetry them will find these little pills value ple in somany ways that they will not be wil ay todo without them. But after alla>k head ACHE bane ox =o many lives that here ts where ke our great boast, Our pillacure it while sthers do not & Carter's I o Liver Pills are very small and 'ary easy to taka, One or two pills makea dose. fhey ave strictly vegetable and do not gripe ox Jurge, but by gentle action please all who 320 them. Io vialaat25centa; five for $l. Sold *w Aragsists everywhere, or sent by - CARTER MEDICINE CO., New Yodg = = SH bed De Goad Bn ge Is 'ne we HONEY! New Canadian & California in Comb Every Woman 1 and should kp reir The new Vaginal Pp-Y bes 1 ot conven. is M Windsor, Ont, General Ag + for Canada. 9 \ Wood's Phosphodine, SETA eS FH 7 i , Ba - \ The Great English Remedy. 2 = mes a gorates the whole Ed Qalcrvous system, w kos new < Blood in old Veins, Cures Nerv ous Debility, 3 iI n Worry, Des Po h sions, Sper ¢ or Frcesses vico $1 Lsixfor$s. One will plea i wll cure d all druggists or mailed in plain pkg. on receipt of price, New pamphlet ifree. The Wood Medicine Co. riy Windsor) Toronto, Oh ma (forme AREER FRESHLY MINED Coal is far more desirable than that dug out of the earth a year ago. It's cleanar--hasn't stored up twelve months' dirt _and dust {t's dryer and in many ways a heat producer. Here it is service om _quick order-- , well screened coal in all th standard sizes at: standard prices for better even than stand- and quality. ~~ we Phone, ®. Fcot Queen St. ARSE LL EE THE WHIG, 75th YEAR DAILY BRITISH WHIG, published at 806-810 King street, Kingston, Ontario, at $6 per year, Lkditions at 2.30 o'clock p.m. WEEKLY BRITISH WHIG, 16 pages, published in parts on Monday and Thurs- day morning at $1 a year. States, charge for postage hss to 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, and cheap work ; nine improved presses. be of receive some fat appointment. He says he has hosts of friends in the Ottawa Valley, and that he would be lacking in manliness and patriotism if he "bridled his tongue" did not filled after the election." People who are suppliants for poli- tical favours cannot afford to be offen- | sive. They may be deserving of great pow, even in THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG MONDAY, OCTOBER 12, 19508. 1 TACKLED MR. MONK. W. T. Hart Defies Conservative | Candidate. | Montreal Herald Although there were not more than To United | the face of good promises, "to be ful 4 score of seople at the meeting held iby Mr. onk, last night, on Van | Horne avenue, Outremont, the veteran er conservative leader for Quebec, not have it all his own way. The British Whig Publishing Co., Ltd: | copsideration, as Mr. Murray says he| W. T. Hart, an Englishman and a J. B.. PENSE, Managing Director. EDW. TORONTO OFFICE. Suite 19 and 20, Queen City Cham- bers, 32 Church St., Toronto, H. E. Smallpeice, Representative. Dailv Wabig. HIS WORD IN QUESTION. M conservatives 'could ber limits in the North-West. Well, return fo showed that William Cowan, of Prince Albert, had bid for a berth against Thomas Mackie, of North Renfrew, and secured it. Cowan's offer was 85.050, and Mackie's $5,025. What the Saskatchewan Lumber company is composed of two Ames not get any No? a the last gession is more conservatives and one liberal, Messrs. and Moore, and Mr. Sander- these own 293 square miles Cowan son, and of several berths his partners bought singly as' well as timber limits. Mr. Cowan bought in his own name, and collectively. They got eighteen berths out of twenty, which were tendered for Mr ber Cowan, in addition, is a mem- - of the Big pany, and it has five hundred square miles of them by tendering for them the larger River Lumber com- timber lands, and acquired amounts. Clearly Mr. Ames is like the average conservative stumper, not at all par- ticular about what he says. It is just as well that he has been promptly found out. THE TRUTH WILL OUT. Foster is experiencing the pains to Mr and others when they quarrelled with the penalties which have come The ex-finance minister chal- A. of the to fight, and he was editors lenged J. Macdonald, Globe, out promptly accommodated. Incidentally some letters which Mr. Foster addressed to the Pr. Oronvtekha, head of the Foresters, regarding the use of the reserve fund, have been printed, and this makes the ex-finance He does not deny the authorship of the ; that--and that late minister very angry. cpistles--he is afraid to do he contents himself with saying Mr. Macdonald did not get possession of them legitimately Foraker did not deny of certain letters published. They the Mr. connected Senator correctness Hearst him with the Standard Oil trust, and | did deny him they him the right to pose as a of Foster need not be so the i letters The hearing, people but that was enough not n did deny leader and instructor men Mr ticular par manner in which reached the years about startling His above fishing ms party some ago not the confidential of from the spittoons liberals them, that legislature, and printing has had a monopoly of w CHALLENGE NOT ACCEPTED weeks Hon. Mr. Weir went into Argenteuil and in the course that G the Some ago n addre charged the member in com late had bought wav into the the last election Mr. Perley lurid language laid curious proceed the At the himself irse denied charge 1n very ame time he has open the uspicion of s by declining to enter into ar that the pending A rreement cam com prominent men drew up a should be of both In this paper the tending that it the candidates by cal partie made to pledge himseli ts to conform absolutely provisions of the law and to far as possible any breach ul agreement liber: candi the the document wa Mr. Per candidate Al his possession question MceGibbon the ned promptly si copy ame time to ervative been In or twelve days has not is the The natural His lends confirmation Why ? delay in signing reement to the charges of Mr. Weir, and rests that su candidate is reser the to now conservative hifhself tactics the ng to right pursue similar MR. MURRAY'S PATRIOTISM Thomas Murray has given his whole away to the Uttmwg He has been a zealous liberal, himself by wrung 1se press he has made poor in politics, and admits that to complains that it would be unwise for him refuse "'a suitable position of emolument lle denies that he desired or sought the He did, look for appointment to the a seat in gevernment however, railway commission, and was given to for the understand that he was too old He did not accept in a kindly or agreeable he that Mr Greenway is as old as he js. Hence he 1s « the service information remembered spirit, as ut in this campaign, opposing the government, because be |, Overcoats dyed or pressed. My Valet. satisfaction or money bac said in parliament that | i} tim- H. | is, but places cannot be found in thé civil service for all who seek them, and there would be a nice commotion if everyone who was disappointed in his quest turned his political coat. The patriotism which Mr. Murray ad- is somewhat cheap in its iver ses quality. AMES' AWFUL AUDACITY. The Robbins' irrigation scheme has by the tories as grave scandal. An agreement with the company to purchase but been denounced a was made 380,000 of land at $1 per acre, not an acre could be had until company irrigated one quarter of the area at an expense of $1,000,000. | Without irrigation the land was use- | less, but after it had been made pro- | ductive the company 380,000 acres more, made valuable by the expenditure of their own money, | was to secure at $1 per acre. | This was one of the dreadful scan- | dals Mr. Ames undertook to expose, but when in Medicine Hat he sud- dénly remembered that he had anoth- | er engagement and left without mak- | ing any reference to this subject. Hon. | Mr. Oliver has just given evidence of | the | scheme which is denounced in the east | Ames' audacity by showing that is:approved in.the west, that the con- | servatives in the east regard it is a | while in the west praise it. | scandal the party and party | candidates | Now the memorials Winnipeg Free Press prints from the Board of Trade, city council and agricultural society of Medicine Hat to the interior, all of them, the minister of | on public | grounds, advocating the granting of to the Robbins these documents further concessions company, and- are signed by the leading conservatives of the city. - Mr. Ames had better leged scandal out of his peep-show. cut this al-| EDITORIAL NOTES. E. Osler is the latest to surren- der that he is B. to Foster's demands and certify "an honest man." The chances now are that the Lau- rier government will increase its ma- jority in the pending election. Mr. Foster must go. He is discredit- ing the part®, and it brazen it much fur- on his account, is if permitted to ther, likely to lose many many votes. Bets are being made by liberal en- Montreal that the gov- will increase its Quebec ma- thusiasts in ernment ority in the present elections from J 3 I forty-one to forty-seven. If a cc uple of the seats in Toronto go liberal thé change can be laid to { Foster, whose candidature is obnoxious | liberals alike. political leper whom the to conservatives and | Foster is a people will not stand journal yarn' about I'he the "yellow railway, is It Toronto Grand Trunk Pacific said to have been exploded receiv | ed the | News. great prominence in Is it to be regarded henceforth as a "yellow journal ?" Ii Kingston wants to be en the side of the federal government--and that was the doctrine preached by conser in the local it Hon. Mr. Harty as its mem vatives election must | re-elect ber. Board composed Toronto's Fducation--a small body, of representa the whole people--is soundly the Its tives of denounced by Ielegram | for its mismanagement extravagance 1 without a precedent. I Mr. Borden when, in his own exalted heroic way, iL the was a bad day for | he repudiated Mr. Graham, oi Montreal My up with a good deal for Star. Graham has put his party. I'he limit has been reached. Standard should throw away to make the Mr { Nickle is Kingston's representative at { Ottawa. Mr. Nickle was elected for | the Toronto house, if you please. The not that its "dope pipe," and try people believe The only paper supporting the op- in Montreal is the Gazette. formerly position I'he best supporter, is demanding the re tiroment of Mr. Foster, and Mr. Bor- den refuses to purge the party by his ¥ Star, the conservatives' sacrifice. Ald. Bengough (Toronto) to by Sir James Whitney as has been | réferred a deserter from the liberal party. Mr | Bengough is as staunch a liberal as ever, and in a letter to the press calls the conservatives to account for their islanders of the liberal premier. The 'sensation of the west is the sacrifice of Sandford Evans (civic con the dictation Hon. Evans may be refused he will troller), at of "Bob" Rogers a conservative nomination, but He will the finish of the braggart.Rogers. not give up the ghost. see Pay gas and electric accounts be- fore the 20th and save ten per cent. the | well-known resident of Outremont, took strong exception to Mr, Monk's | statements concerning immigration, and defied him to repeat them before an English-speaking audience. Mr. Monk had been inveighing against wasteful and scandalous ex- penditure, and had reached the point of declaring that the result of the money spent on promoting immigra- |tion was that the scum of England, 'men who had been given their choice 'by English magistrates of coming to Canada or going to jail, were flooding | to this country. Mr. Hart challenged the statement. He wanted to know why the opposi- tion had not opposed the expenditure on immigration before these alleged scandalous conditions arose. He chal lenged Mr. Monk to repeat before an | English audience his characterization of English immigration, and said that as an Englishman in Canada he strongly resented these attacks, and would defy anyone who made them to prove them. -------------- To - REAR ADMIRAL C. H. Rear Admiral Conway Hillyer Arnold, who was selected to command the new division of the Atlantic Squadron, which was announced late in September by the Naval Department, was born in New York on November 14, 1848. He was educated in private schools and then sent to the Naval® Academy, from which he graduated in 1867. He married Miss Fanny Wood on November 17th, 1870, the same year reached the old-fash- ioned rank of master in the United States Navy. He was created com- ander in 1898 and a captain 1902 I only recently reached ' the rank of rear admiral, and this is his first im- portant command as chief of a squadron on active sea duty ARNOLD. he a in Service To The Farmer. Hon. Sidney Fisher "Before you farming men I want to take up new questions affecting my own department. When the conserva- tives left Ottawa they had done noth- {ing for you in the way of cold-stor- age ships, save for a few rough ex- periments with an ice system. Aus- tralia, New Zealand and the United States driving Canada out of the English market because they had In the years 1876 we exported were proper refrigeration 1888 under the tories 822.750.000 in bufter; in the decade from 1886 to 1896 it dropped to S88, 250,000, In 1897 the department of agriculture placed the first mechanical coid plant in the 500.000 solutely storage in operation, and next ten years we shipped $46 in butter. That to the cold There was As a in value, grown, due ab- facilities. no change in other condi- It farm land has number of farm I now the great and wo They days, and no remain be made the was storage tions resu in- the an creased ers has proportion of our young mer staying the farms in But of the men are left them wonder cause lot Unequal Human Eyes. think greater M who their sight power any peciect | in persons a visual one ey ard to right and tician fine than 3 other power ith re the w person occupied m , strong on tthe table, ear hi Ww concentrated our race bee sighted as the German wl tennis, hockey in our public schools short- ilst football, cricket, r., dE ¢ coura Overcoats dyed or pressed. My Valet. Sir PYouglas Straight hitor of the Pall= Mall will retire in March Gazette, CATARRH NOW CURABLE, But Never By Medicine Swallowed, Snuffs, Sprays and Douches. rrh a blood disease and that is why it cannot be cured by any medicine taken into the stomach. Ca- tarrh 1s a © wuble contracted from the germ-laden air you breathe inward These germs fasten them selves in the tissue and air cells of the breathing multiply by mil lions, coughing, rais- ing of the nose, difficulty in breathing, hoarse- dryness and stoppage of the nose, tickling in the throat and other symptoms that can only be reached by the dry air principal of Hyomei. It medicates the air you breathe with the curative properties of the Australian Eucalyptus Forests, where catarrh is unknewn The reason you get relief in a min- ute or two from Hyomei is becausegit destroys every catarrhal germ in the air you breathe, and its dry penetrat- ing aroma will reach the innermost recesses of the air passages, killing millions of germs a minute. Their de- struction means freedom for oppressed G. W. Mahood a guarantee of Price, 81. 1s not erm tr organs, sneezing, mucous, discharge from cause ness, respiratory sells Hyomei organs under member for Jacques Cartier and form- | did | TOWN OF GAMNOQUE DISTURBED BY THE FIRE ALARMS -------- } | Which Pealed Out Warnings, But | Were Out of Order--A Junior | Rugby Player Sprained His | Ankle. | | Gananoque, Oct. 12.~A wedding. of | {interest took place at the Methodist | parsonage, Lyn, on Thursday, when | Miss Ehzabeth Griffiths, was married | to Harold Johnson, son of Mr. and | Mrs. S. Johnson, Brockville, by Rev G. S. Stafford. ' . "Hod" Knight, the well-known cen- tre hai of Gananoque"s 0. R. F. U. | junior team, is nursing a sprained jankle as a reshlt of Friday after- noou's practice game. The sympathy of the community is | extended to Edgar Elliott, Willets- | home. Less than a month ago he lost | his wile, at the age of uurty-two, and i on Friday his infant son, eight months | old, Carl Edgar Elhott, passed away. | The funeral took place on Sunday to the Joyceville cemetery. | There was quite an excitement in | town about 4:15 on Sunday morning, an alarm of fire being sounded from several boxes in rapid succession. Crowds quickly gathered, and the fire brigade took a run in the west and south wards, without finding any yre. The alarm kept-Sounding at in. tervals till after five o'clock. It was found "out that the wires had got crossed on Mill street, causing the trouble. Needless to say tie major portion of . Ggnanoque's church-going population were on time for morning service. Gananoque Rifle Association held a preliminary practice, on Saturday, and will practice again, to-day, prior to the annual fall association matches to be held on Wednesday and Satur- day. Frank Wright, Stone street, has leased from W. F. LaQue, the store edst of Charles street, lately occupied by H. Cook. At the regular session of the town- ship council, the past week, the Front | of Leeds and Lansdowne authorized, | by motion, their solicitor to communi- | cate with the council of Escott, re do- | ing their share of repairs on the town | line' between these townships, and in | case of failure to comply with the | terms of agreement to enter action | against ott. William Hazel, Sy- | denham street, A. C. Hudspeth, | Church street, W. Donevan, Victoria avenue, and Charles Donevan, Mon- treal, left on Saturday in Mr. Done- van's launch for a week's shooting at Hay Bay. The coal schooner Horace Taber, Capt. Frank Barnhart, cleared light for Oswego, Saturday afternoon. | The schooner Clara finished unloading at Robertson's wharf, Saturday even- and pulled out of the Gananoque this morning, bound for Os- Rev. Mr. McConnell, Pittsburg Me- | ing, river, wogo. circuit, filled the pulpit of Grace thodist church on Sunday, supplying | | | 1 | | | | | OUR LEADING LINES Overcoats See Our $15.00 Black Overcoat, Silk Faced or Plain, 2 Raincoats See Our $12.50 English Raincoats. Suits See Our Special $15 Blue Suits. See Our Special $15 Brown Sits. See Our Special $15 Black Suits. Gloves s See Our $1.00 English Street Gloves. Shirts See Our Handsome $1.00 Shirts. ; Hats We have the best $2.00 Hats in Canada. Collars All the new styles in Collars, 2 for 25ec. Latest Arrivals < C See Our New Fancy Taffeta Silk Neckwear, 50c. The H. D. Bibby Co. Kingston's One Price Clothing House. BRITISH CARUSO FOUND: Street Car Driver Who Possesses Marvellous Voice. Wakefield, England, expects to go lown into musical history as the birth- place of a 'British Caruso, all because {a street car driver named Potts has for Rev. J. Tallman Pitcher, conduct- {been discovered to be the possessor ot jng anniversary services in Sherbrooke, PQ. Rev. T. F. Heeney, Chalmers' Presbyterian church, Lansdowne, filled | the pulpit of St. Andrew's church at | both services, to-day. Rev. Henry | Gracey took charge of Mr. Heeney's | appointments at Lansdowne. Balfour | Mudie, Kingston, has secured the offi- | ces of the late P. Heaslip and will, | according to report, open up here for | the practice of his profession, having heen lately admitted to the bar. Miss Featherstone, Taylor, left of late for | Rochester, 'N.Y., where she has enter; od St. Mary's hospital as nurse-in- training. { | | High Piplomacy. Smart Set: Mrs. Gramercy--You look all tired | Parke--No wonder. It's so try- | to find out from your friends what they's like to have for Christ- | mas without conveying the impression | that they may expect it from you. ing 1 the you nurse, each a "Yes, children," said "the stork has brought little brother." Oh, good !" cried they, and ceased their play, "Do let's all run and tell poor mother !"' honse doesn't Spector--Your architect's origi- ook much like nal design. Victome--No, but it looks more like it than the cost looks like his origi- nal estimate. new the Belle--Did Fred find marriage levating as he thought it would be ? Jack--No; it failed to lift him out debt as of "Papa, why do brides wear long | veils ? "To conceal presume, my their satisfaction, I son." MISSIONARY IN TROUBLE. He Wanted Money to Build a Church. Seme years ago, when the former secretary of war was governor-general yf the Philippines, he was called upon ne morning by the Rev. Henry Steuntz, {a missionary of the Methodist church, now a bishop. The missionary was'in | trouble. He had raised the money to build a church and had purchased the site, only to find that, under an old Spanish law still in force, no such build- ing could be erected unless the same | was to be dedicated to the Catholic | church. It was a law handed down from the good old days when church and state travelled hand in hand in the Spanish possessions, The governor-general heard the mis- | | siomary's statement and said, "Wait a Hew minutes." | ¢ Turning to his Taft' dictated a few lines and then | handed the typewritten sheet to the | missionary, saying, "That's all right" { A few days later the popular gov: { ernor-general found tacked to the front | door of his palace a huge placard bear- | ing the words\in big letters "Legal Re- | pair Shop: Of4d Laws Repaired While { You Wait." ; | The joke was public property in Man- | ila for some days, none enjoying it more than the goverfor-general himself. stenographer, Mr i | 1 ---- rT "Marshmallows" for toasting before grate fires. McConkey's are sold in | Kingston only at Gibson's Red Cross | Drug Store. Phone 230. i Bests" Hair Restorer, the old-fash- | ioned kind. restores gray hair to its | natural color, and costs but 50c. { | pected. singer | pany | miner, who won the | several a marvelous voice Some time ago the daughter of Lady Catherine Milnes-Gaskell attended a small concert in Wakefield, the car driver sang. His very first rich, mel- low notes struck Miss Milnes-Gaskell with wonder. She had never heard. a voice of such marvellous purity 'and sweetness; it was a gold mine of in- calculable richness. : She induced the young singer to go to London: the opinion of the leading vocal experts confirmed hers that i Potts' voice was one in thousands; and the car 'driver commenced the course »f training which one day he hopes will make him a veritable king of | song A few years ago Herr Zichrer, the famous Austrian composer, was dis- urbed in his work by the constant sing- |ing of a maid-of-all-work next door In order to stop the annoyance he inter- viewed the young woman, assured her that she possessed. a charming voice, {but begged her to give it a complete year in order to avoid mn- This rather disingenuous ad vice the maid seemed to follow; at 1 Herr Zichrer was not bothered \fter that by the voige next door. Two years later he was #fnazed to find that the young woman had blossomed into in operatic star and was making a splendid salary. Among the students at the Royal Academy of Music is a young Bangor -abman, of whom great things are ex Jy accident some one petent to judge found that he possessed splendid tenor in an English was formerly a chief Welsh rest for a juring it. yoice com- elsh coal prize for eisteddfod opera solo singing at the several years ago Equally romantic stories are told of of the violin prodigies who have recently come into notice. Hein- rich Fielder was discovered by a weal- thy Welsh woman who was travelling in the Tyrol and who heard his re markable playing in a cafe. She took him to London and started him on the road to fame 'and fortune. Leopold Lustig, who has been a pupi Professor August Wilhelmj, 7 his preceptor from of taken by End show was walking through that section he heard the boy improvising wonderfully on his fiddle. At once he obtained the consent of parents for the boy's an the | musical education | A Black Mark For The Other One. | A man by the name of Evans digd and went to heaven, of course. When {he arrived at the pearly gates he said to St. Peter: "Well, I'm here." -- DOMINION BREWERY <0 LIMITED, TORONTO. White Label India Pale Ale XXX Porter Invalid Stout Every Cork Branded RIGNEY & HICKEY 136 & 138 Princess St. COAL! The kind you are looking for is the kind we sell, com- | A leading | One day while Wilhelm; | | | SCRANTON Coal fs good coal and wo guar. antes prompt delivery. . 'Phone, 133. Booth & Co., FOOT WEST STREET. THE FRONTENAC LOAN AND INVESTMENT SOCIETY ESTABLISHED, 1863. President--Sir Richard Cartwright. Money issued on City and Farm Pro- perties. Municipal an County Deben- tures. Mortgages purchased. Deposits received and interest allowed, St. Peter looked at him and asked his name : "John Evans," was the reply. St. Peter looked through his book and shook his head. "You don't be long here," he said, pointing to the exit. "But I am sure I belong here," said { the man. "Wait a minute," said St. Peter. He looked again and in the back of the book found his name. #Sure," said the guardian of the gate, "you belong here, but you weren't ex- pected for twenty years. Who's your doctor? Perhaps You Khow What Ails This Man ? He is Just Like Thousands of Others, in All Probability Like Yourself! His like a hungry lion. hates to exert himself. Look at his eyes--they are glassy and dull. His tongue is coated furred. -. When he gets up to walk his appetite is voracious: head | swims; if he stoops over he gets dizzy. Is he sick! Not bad enough to go to Bed; but he is constipated, his sys- tem is clogged up, his stomach is bilious and over-laden ! . "Just one thing to do. Take Dr. Hamilton's Pills, which loosen the Yet he is lazy and | and | He eats bowels and flush out all unhealthy the The liver is toned up, the s - matter. blood is strengthened and ach given assistance. You feel better the minute you take | Dr. Hamilton's Pills, because they are {made to act promptly. The whole se- |cret of good health is solved by using his grand medicine. Good for men, {women and children. Every box guaranteed, nrice 25c., or [give for $1, at all dealers, or Polson & Co., Kingston, Viartiord, Conn., U.S.A. Ont., and / / \