PAGE FOUR. OLD STOVE PIPES are made to look bright and new by a coat of THE SHERWIY- WILLIAMS STOVE PIPE ENAMEL It dries with a good gloss and gives a dressy appearance to the entire stove. Is easy to apply ; does not drag under the 'brush. Won't smoke or blister if properly used. The, best stove-pipe enamel made. - Corbett's Hardware Price 10e, 15¢, 20¢, 25¢ cach, We Are Now Offering 20 PER CENT. OFF On all Suits and Overcoats, the Suits are all up-to-date in every way, the latest style in Tweeds, Serges and Worsteds. The Coats are the very latest styles in Dark Tweeds and Beavers. We also offer 10 Per Cent. Off Boots and Penman's All wear on hand from 34 to 44 Isaac Zack's Shoes Wool at stock ed suit, A good Fleece-1 $1.00 per of Under- sizes Princess street, A large quantity of Hardwood Slabs, sound and dry. Make a hot fire at a low price. Good burning. Try a load. S. ANGLIN & CO., Saw & Planing Mills | Wellington St., North *Silver Plate that Wears" Silver For All Occasions No better gift can be suggested than a dainty piece of silver marked "1847 ROGERS BROS. Knives, forks, spoons, efc., so marked have a reputation for artistic charm and enduring quality. SOLD BY LEADING DEALERS Dishes, tea trays, coffee sets, eic., should be marked MERIDEN BRITA CO. Opposite Grand Central Station NEW YORK CITY. ROOMS $1 a DAY and UPWARDS Baggage to and from sta- tion free Send 2-cent stamp for New York OQity Guidebook and Map. UNION HOTEL 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. ete., at 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 dugt : it's dryer and in many ways a ter 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. 2. CRAWFORD Phone, 9. Foot Queen St. (presidency of the republic, 'THE WHIG, 75th YEAR DAILY BRITISH WHIG, published at 806-310 King street, Kingston, Ontario, at $6 per year, Iluditions at 2.30 and 4 | o'clock Po + | WEEKLY BRITISH WHIG, 16 published in parts on Monday and Thurs- day morning at $1 a year. To United | States, charge for Postage has to be Halded, Hak i ly $3 and of 1.50 per year. Attached is one of the best Job Print. ing Offices in Canada; rapid, stylish, and cheap work ; nine improved presses. The British Whig Publishing Co., Lt'd, EDW. J. B. PENSE, Managing Director; TORONTO OFFICE. Suite 19 and 20, Queen City Cham- bers, 82 Church St., Toronto, H. Smallpeice, Representative. Dailv Wibig. POLITICS ACROSS THE WAY. The New York Herald has made a most careful the political field -- collecting its information through special correspondents and analyzing it with great care--and the result is: a declaration to the effect that Mr. Taft will be elected to the survey of which are regarded Mr. Tait are: Connecticut, Delaware, Hlinois, Towa, Kansas, Maine, Massachusetts, Michigen, Minnesota, New Hampshire, New York, North Pennsylvania, Vermont, The states reasonably as safe for California, Idaho, New Jersey, Dakota, Ohio, Oregon, Rhode Island, Utah, Washington, West Virginia, and Wisconsin. These represent 280 votes in the electoral eollege. The states that are reasonably sure for Mr. Bryan are: Alabama, Arkan- sas, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mary- land, Mississippi, North Carglina, Carolina, Missouri, Nevada, South Vir- the Oklahoma, Tennessee, Texas and ginia. These have 136 votes in electoral college. With de- mocratic leanings, Nebraska and Ken- tucky, with 21 votes, The doubtful states are : With republican leanings, Indiana, Colorado, Montana, and Wyoming, with 26 votes. Put in another way the situation is Votes in the electoral college, 483: sure for Taft, 280; for Bryan, 186; doubtful, 47. The contest in New as follows : sure York is getting warmer as the day of polling draws near. The eampaign for the governor- ship has been described as "'neck and neck," and this parent lukewarmness of many republi- Mr. Hughes' attitude the race track, and the anti-gambling act which he carried in the legislature. But the the state go democratic, because it is was due to the ap- cans because of towards the public utilities, and party cannot afford to let afraid of Tammany Hall which, as de- Juffalo News, indepen- of of thieves, of gamblers and rob It increasing the yearly cost scribed by the dent, "is a body of plunderers, allies bers, public and private." is cre dited with of New York's city government by E. | THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 20. 1908. pulse to the missionary cause. 't has been cordially endorsed by the church- {es and by their co-operation it ie | spreading all over the North Ameri- | can continent. Tt is winning the en- thusiastic support of the most active! | charchmen. The laymen, it is said, | like to tackle big problems, and there | is nothing larger than the religious conquest of the heathen world. To be Sure the business men must J revel in figures, and the record of the missionary movement gives them all they can desire in this respect. Thus there are to-day, 6,000 societies, which | aim to reach 325,000,000 people, a number that is larger than the united populations of America, Great Bri- tain, Germany and France, and there 675,000,000 unprovided for | Canada's share in the work is the | evangelization of 40,000,000 persons, and there are 900,000 church members who must see that it is done. Is the task stupendous ? The Lay- men's associations are not at all dis- mayed. They are meeting their obliga- tion cheerfully. In twenty cities there have been increased contributions, and to a remarkable extent. Note a few of them : Toronto, from $141,000 last year to $500,000 ; Montreal, (half the church membership), from $100,000 to $250,000 ; Ottawa, and only 12,235 per- sons, from $28,250 to $75,000 ; Hamil- ton, from $40,000 to $75,000 ; London, from $25,000 19,$50,000 ; Victoria, B. C., from $4,000 to $25,000; Vancou- ver; from $27,000 tp $75,000 ; Winni- peg, from $8 to $10 per head. The plan-is to raise $10 per head from all and all missionary contri- Ail cannot it, but they may average that Many pen have given $1,000 Some have given larger amounts. The best of all is that they. do their gifts fo other purposes. The movement will be considered in the meetings which remain | sources butors. do sum. each. not limit or reduce all its phases at will be held in the city this evening, and On Friday there will be a banquet--the favourite mode of getting closer to the business the given will largely to-morrow. evening men--and addresses then to be determine the sue- cess of the cause in Kingston. EDITORIAL NOTES. Bourassa's stamp of approval does not count for much while Sir Wilfrid Laurier is around. The Toronto News has retired from The evidence in the late the prophecy business. seer who was so much in election has given up the ghost. The Borden make more lean, M.P. The lean will not follow. lead, Mr. Mac- that use of Mr. Telegram suggests He wants Mr. Foster will talk no more about the tunnel connecting Prince Edward Island with the main shore. The is- landers do not take him at all seri- 30,000,000 in ten years, anf the re it there would publicans fear that with in com- mand of state offices be | something" doing politically. Hence the MMughes' candidature, with all that it stands for, is appealing to | and the man's | the popular support, re-election by a large majority is now | considered certain -- LAYMEN IN MISSIONS. Kingston has of the power, the force, the value of the heard something Laymen's Missionary Movement, but more will be known about it ere the | Chown series of special meetings which are now in progress have been completed. Every has had a re great movement markable beginning. In 1781 there was revival in England, a monthly concert of the first foreign society occurred in 1792. prayer, and founding of the distinctly missionary This led to consecration of William Carey to 1793. He forty different of 200.- the Oriental missions in trans lated Bible tongues the the into amd circulation 000 copies, "provided," as the record Bibles 500,- 000,000 souls within the space of half reads, "'vernacular for a century." had its in Canada. Mr. Tay- The China Inland Mission commencement at a conference 1888, lor on-the-Lake one address was at Niagara- As a result of tendered $2,500 time in he was at the I'hirteen same volunteered for missionary service. He persons feared for results financially, but the churches to which the volunteers be- longed insisted on paying the ex- penses, and his anxiety was increased in another way so that he eried out, "Don't less you gi give me any more money un- ve the men and women to use it." John R Students' and gave as its motto the evan- the Missionary Movément later, gelization of the world in this genera- It went forth to the universities in tion of short America and Europe, and time trained men, offered themselves, that missionary boards began to rub Then the Young People's Movement their eyes. Missionary went around the Sunday schools and ple's sotieties, and to-day there are tens of thousands of young nen and young peo- women holding up before themselves the prospect of going out as mission- aries into the heathen field. the had its birth desire to use the Two years ago sionary Movement in New York, in the business men with their business meth- | . . . ! EER |, ond give a new and mighty im-| | not a day too soon. | yet been located. } established; as an outcome of a great | | ple | that Mott came into view with ! thousands of picked men, | Laymen's Mis- | ously. After immoral plays in Toronto, and There must be a | cleansing of some of the play houses if "Toronto the good" is not going to lose its name. Sir James Whitney, Mr. Hanna, and Mr. Foy the late They elections. Wise men. | realize that the province resented their untimely interference. The hole in the ceiling at one of the! to Rev. Dr. referred in Kingston, has not It of movement. polling booths, which was the find the purity Dr. Reaume is extolled as an exam- of French-Canadians. Ontario's affection for And he showed affection by preaching against Laurier and his assogiates. Mr was wild over to be what Hanna meant Hanna had it that the country Borden, and that there was an upheaval as in 1878 | Just is not ap- parent in view of past experiences. nationalist cause in Quebec is All its can- The not succeeding very well. didates--three in the federal and one the down 'before the peoples' displeasure. in local (Quebec) elections--went The consolation of the Ottawa, Jour- | nal is that the liberal government will have a poor time of ,it in the next five years, and that the conservatives for will have a better chance next time. Really ? success has done great work for the liberal party is the Canadian Freeman, the best Catholic weekly i A paper that in Ontario. It weathered stormy times in 1896, but stuck to its colors and up- held the principles of liberalism. Pro- Daley intimates that he grey in service. The result 's elections should serve as a ! prietor is getting | Monday | tonic to him and aid hinr in renewing | his youth. 80 | Remark- Blac able for | Wateh "x pleasing flavor. The big black plug chewing tobacco. 2267 } . i trouble is, Mr. Mac-| 3 | t | cessful vaccination ol have nothing to say about | the | of | MUST BE VACCINATED OR CANNOT ATTEND THE COLLEGIATE. Medical Health Officer Utilizes His Power of Compulsion--Pupils Must Produce Certificates By Nov. 27th. . Parents of children at the Collegiate Institute, opposed to vaccination, are protesting against the action of the medical health officer in posting a no- tice in the institute stating that if pupils attending there do mot produce a certificate of vaccination by No- vember 27th, they will not be allow- ed to further attend classes. This is making vaccination compulsory in the institute. The law on the matter gives the health officer power to do this, with the cofsent of the local board of health. The section of the vaccination act reads : "In all cases where it is ed necessary by the medical health officer of any municipality, owing to the presence or threatened presence of smallpox, he may, with the approv.l of the local board of health, sequire certificates of successful vaccination or of insusceptibility on re-vaccination, within seven years, of all students of | high schools, collegiate institutes, col-| leges and universities within the muni- | cipality, to be presented to the pro-| per authorities of the said institu- | tions, and no student refusing to pe sent such certificate on demand, shall | be admitted to further attendance in | classes in said institution until such | certificate' is furnished." (R.8.0,,! 1897, ch. 249, sec. 17.) Some parents thought that the Board of Education had control over! this matter, but it seems not. The education board's authority is limit- | ed, as the following section shows : "It shall be lawful for the trustees of any public, separate or high school | to provide that no children shall _ be | permitted to attend any school with out producing a certificate of success- ful vaccination when demanded of him or her by the teacher." (R.S.0., 1897, ch. 249, sec. 16.) This section gives the Board of Edu- cation power to refuse to allow chil- dren to attend school if not vaceinat- | ed, but the board of health is given a | greater power as regards collegiate in- | stitutes and colleges. The compulsory vaccination re- | quired at the Collegiate Institute will, no doubt, reduce the attendance to some extent. The Notice Issued. Medical Health Officer Bell was seen this morning and stated that he had sent the following notice to the prin- cipals of Queen's university, School of Mining, Medical College, Regiopolis College, Collegiate Institute, King- ston Business College, Frontenac Busi- ness College : \ Kingston, Oct. 26th, 1908.--Owing to the prevalence of small-pox in the city of Kingston I beg to notify you that I will require certificates of suc- or of insuscepti- bility on re-vaccination within seven years, of all students of your institu- tion to be presented to the proper au- thorities of the said institution with- in thirty days after the receipt of this notice. I would respectfully. re- quest that no student refusing to pre- sent such certificate within the pre- scribed time shall be admitted to further attendance in classes in the said institution until such certificate is furnished.--Yours respectfully, JOHN H. BELL, Medical Health Offi- cer. Now At Fort Henry. four of small-pox were removed yesterday to the quarters prepared, in Fort Henry, and ' the city is now, apparently, free of the liscase, as no new case has appeared for over a week. Precaution will be taken to prevent an outbreak. Dr. H. Hunter, a Queen's medical college graduate of last spring, has been ap- | pointed by the Board of Health to take charge of the patients, and he is now with them. Dr. Hodgetts, the provincial health | officer, has not yet visited Kingston, vthouch has been requested to do so. r The cases he | | HSER 1 | ® | THE CAMPAIGN. The laymen have not re- sponded with credit to the call of the great movement. The women redeemed the meeting by adding their numbers last evening. The conferences to-day were not well attended. Surely the men will gather to-night in force, workman, student and business worker alike. AAA AA AHHH BHF EH FEAR FTA A Word In Season. Montreal Witness. Our latest anxiety in industrial quarters has not been how to keep our people at home to fill our werk- shops, but how to keep people from abroad from pouring in upon them, | and this not as the result of the pros- | perity of our manufactures--they gre | chronically asking more help--but on | account of the agricultural expansion of our country. Our own people used to fill our factories, but that is be | coming more and more a thing of the past. Any further stimulation to | workshop industry at the expense of agriculture would only hasten this change. We really need to be told some other way by which the tariff | bonusing of lame industries' is going | to benefit "'the whole of the people of { Canada." It Must Be The Best. If the government" who no doubt | states CAREFULNESS ADVISED. | ---- $ Urged to Act Like a True Sports.' | Canadian Sportsman, Toronto. i Always remember you are a tres-| passer. When you pass through al gate close and {asten it securely be | hind you. When you krock down a! top rail in climbing a fence do not forget to replace it. If you are seek-| ing information don't ask for it as though you had the right to demand! it. Be civil. Remember all the time that you are a trespasser, but above | and beyond all never neglect to | stamp out the last vestige of fire! before leaving camp in the morning. | Look carclully over the ground, then | look again. A very small ember may | remain unnoticed until a current . of | air travels its way, it then begins to | revive, gradually the tiny spark ex-| pands into a flame, a bush fire has! started and many a settler has been | ruined by just such carelessness. You | sportsmen when you go to the woods | every autumn hunting big game, if you be worthy of the name, ever | havein mind the motto, "Do unto others as you would 'they should do | unto you." You are a welcome visi- tor as long as you behave yourself, but never fet the fact be absent from your mind that a few minutes care-| lessness on your part may mean great | loss and perhaps ruin to those who | have allowed you to camp in their woods. 4 1 know men in this city who an- nually go on hunting trips and their presence is a menace to the safety of | those in whose neighborhood they | camp. They drink much iskey, | spend half their time roaming in the | woods not far distant from camp, and | generally shoot at every moving ob- | ject, be it animal or man. That more | people are not slaughtered every year | is due to their bad marksmanship, but | the record is a sufficiently murderous | one to demand the law's interference. | For several years the Sportsman has suggested to the Ontario legislature the passage of a law inflicting a pen- | ! | | i | alty of imprisonment upon any per- on who, through carelessness or the | reckless use of firearms, causes injury | to another. The suggestion made in these columns has borne fruit in some across the border and since laws have been passed there inflicting | punishment varying from one to five | years imprisonment the number of ac- cidents have materially decreased. Now on the eve of the big game { shooting season in Ontario we warn | every man who goes into the woods | with gun or rifle to make sure of the identity of the object they aru shoot- ing at. Never run the risk of being | forced to use such an awful excuse as "It looked just like a deer and 1 could have sworn it was one." Men whose sight is so deceptive that they cannot tell the difference between a man and a deer at any distance should engage in some other recrea- tion. They are too dangerous to be allowed to roam at large with a | gun in their hands. If you are a true sportsman you are hy instinct a! gentleman and will so behave your- | self on your annual hunt as to be | welcome on your return. i Mr. Foy Is A Law-Breaker. Toronto Star. Attorney-General Foy did something that was wholly indefensible when he accompanied Mr. McNaught into a polling booth and tried to convince | the deputy that Mr. McNaught had a | right to vote there. Mr, had been deprived of his vote by. an had introduced in the legislature. The attotney-general admitted before he | left the booth that Mr. McNaught had | no vote there. In any case, the attor | ney-general has no right to be present | in a polling place except to cast his | own vote. A weak deputy might have been overawed by the presence of the ! attorney-general into committing an | illegal act. | Overdoing The Act. Hamilton Herald J Perhaps the liberal more by the exaggerptéd and unfair | 'charges of its pi than it lost through the actual faults of adminis-| tration. So venomous \were the at tacks of conservative speakers and writers, so wild and exaggerated their | statements made in censure of the gov- ernment, that very probably they | caused a reaction in public sentiment. More moderation and fairness in eri- ticism would have been more effective. | I'he scandal campaign was overdone. | eause gained Large grape fruit, 10c. each, at Gilbert's. A Running Sore Again Overcome. Dr. Sparks' cures a case year had been many remedies. No case of running sore or skin disease should be pronounced incur- able until it has been treated with Dr. Sparks' Vegetable Ointment. = The case of Francis Love, of Hull, Que., is "4A powerful illustration of | the healing powers contained in Dr. Sparks' Vegetable Ointment. He Says: ! "1 have suffered from a running sore for over a year, and have tried | a great mumber of remedies. None | of them seemed to do me any good. | One day I was handed a small sam- | ple box of Dr. Sparks' Vegetable | Ointment. However so small, it] gave me faith, and I at once pro- cured a large 25c. box, and after using a few boxes I am completely cured." Dr. Sparks' Vegetable Ointment highly recommended for any skin} lisease, owing to the fact that it | contains powerful, healing, soothing | and antiseptic oils which are taken | Vegetable Ointment which for over one treated with a great : | is dre acting on the advice of the best medical authority, have seen fit to have the milk for the Royal Military | College pastuerized, it is strong proof | that pastuerized milk is the only pro- per milk for the homes. Same can be had from Kirk & Lee at the same | price as that "simply strained" from {all kinds and conditions of cows. | { Sale of boys' sweaters, 50c., | Strong woollen stockings, 25c. | York Dress Reform. Toilet soap made from pure olive extra New from vegetables only. For Cuts, | Burns, Ulcers; Pimples, Eczema, Bar. | ber's Rash, Ring Worms, Cracked | Lips, Ete., it has no equal. | 'It will also cure any form of Piles, | ltching, Bleeding or Protruding. For sale at G. W. Nahood's and all first- class drug store. Accept no sub- stitute. This vegetable compound is GREEN IN COLOR. {oil at Gibson's Red Cross Drug Store. Dr. Spark's Vegetable Ointment McNaught | € amendment which the attorney-general | i ly attended to. | at Simmons Bros. and A. Vanluven's Parcel -- | The H. D. Bibby Eo. FATHAIISISIIIIIIIIIRISE ¥ i . Suits and Overcoats, + If you belong to the Fifteen Dollar Suit and Overcoat class you're the man we're after. i We believe we can 'out dress, for the money, any Fifteen Dollar Suit and Overcoat man that does not come here for his Clothes, All the necessary little thi are put into our' Clothing. Fabrics new, and the inside work built will convince you. $15.00 will buy a Swell Botany Serge, Blue single or double-breasted Suit. $15.00 will buy a fine Black Cheviot Suit. $15.00 will buy a fine Worsted Suit Greys or Greens. $15.00 will buy a fine Cheviot Overcoat Silk Faced. coat is a beauty." $15.00 will buy one of our swell Black Beaver Overcoats. $15.00 will buy one of our Nobby College Ulsters patterned Tweeds and Kerseys. The H. D. Bibby Co. Kingston's One Price Clothing House. ngs in the cutting and making to stay. A look or Black, , in the New Browns, "This , in swell MADE IN CANADA ROYAL Watches The skilled labor essential to the production of a good timepiece is so expensive that some manufacturers do not use much of it. REGINA Watches are made by "the most skilled me- chanics in the world. That's why the man with a REGINA is 80 sure of his time. Sole Agents, Kinnear & d'Esterre The Watch House. 100 Princess St., Kingston. L. LESSES, 507 Princess St, Cor. Chatham St. Invites all old customers and the public in general to inspect his large stock of new and second-hand goods in HIS NEW STORE Special Antique Furniture and Furni- ture of all kinds ; also a large range of New and Second-Hand Stoves. All Kinds of Goods Bought and Sold or Exchanged. MONUMENTS Inspect our stock and work before placing your order, INSCRIPTION WORK SOLICITED. The Kingston Granite and Marble Works WELCH'S OLD STAND. Cor Princess and Clergy Sts, NEW MACHINE SHOP. A call is invited for all kinds of general manufacturing and machine repairing. pecial work such as machine sharpening lawn mowers (we have the only machine in the ety, for this urpore)--repairing sewing machi guns, y onographs, scales, razors, po tools, dies; brazing, model and pattern mak ing. Best of attention given all w Re irs may be tested before leaving | shop Work guaranteed. Work outside city prompt Charges moderate, THE CINDERELLA is the Shoe of the Day. Its' popularity increases every month, because its merits ap to the great' masses of sensible w who their feet shod be tially, stylishly, comfortably and economically. It has always been easy to get fine shoes if you paid a fancy price. The Cinderella Shoes for this time make it- possible to buy stylish and save inoney on every pair. $3.00 and $3.50 A PAIR. H. JENNINGS, King St Look! Would Any of These Suit Yno? 1--New Brick Dwelling, 9 rooms, B. & C. and furnace, also good stable and driva-house, large lot, $2,600. 2--First-class Nearly New Frame Dwel- ling, 4 bedrooms, B. & C. $1,650. 3~New Frame Dwelling, 4 bedrooms, B. & C., large lot, $1, 4--Good Stone Dwelling excellent repair, stable, garden and orchard of the choicest varieties of fruit, $1,650. 5--Stone Dwelling, stable and one acre of good garden land, $1,850. I. J. Lockhart, 159 Wellington Street. Wm. Murray Auctioneer 27 BROCK ST. New Carriages, Cutters, Harness ete., for sale. Sale of Horses every Saturday, J. W. HUNTER, Machinist, 30 Montreal" St, (near Princess) Kiagston. Orders taken Delivery. TO CONTRACTORS & BUILDERS fhe Perfect Brxk & Tile Co., Wash burn, Oni; PAISLEY & CHISHOLM, Lessees Are to contract for immediate delivery. rick hat wil send pe plant, 60.000 daily, IF IT IS TO GET A SINK Set up or a bath room installed. I can do it in first-class style and at the right price. Give m#é a' trial. DAVID HALL Phone 335, 64 Brock t in