t Don't Waste Time Clean up at once, with the best and easy preparations .-- oir Slishef for Wood at 15¢. and Polishes for Metals, at 5c. and @ Polishes for 5 ty or Teathers, at 15c. Stove Pipe Enamel, 10c. and 13e¢. Black Lead, Sc. and 10c. Aluminum Faint, 2ic. and up. Gold Paint, 15¢. and up. All the little helps for cleaning, § CORBETTS HARDWARE. all the troubica inch CURE besdache, yot Carter's Little Liver Pfs ane Waally valuable in curing and pre= thisanno; laint, while they alse pd Arocha disondonas thestomach stimulate thy Srpriuariabnis. Even if they ouyg fobe they would bealmost priceless to tose whe Puiler from this distressing complaint; but fortis Ppetaly their, does notend those Wiio ene try them will find these little pills vale ER ry &%a bane of 50 many lives that here is hare We make our great boast, Our piliscure it while do not. Little Liver Pills are mali to take. One or two Ty ony sre strictly vegetable do not gri Be Errnlii teos In vialsat 25 cents ; five for $1. / druggists everywhere, or sent by mall, CARTER MEDICINE CO., New Yorki Hay's " Never Fails to Restore " Gray Hair to itsNatural * Color and Beauty. #¢ No matter how long ithas been gray 4 orfaded. Promotes a luxuriant growth it of healthy hair. Stops its falling out, and positively removes n- .. druff. Keeps hairsoft and glossy. Re- ¥* fuse all substitutes. 2}{ times as much in $1.00 as 50c. sizg. Not a Dye. + $Land 50c. bottles, at druggists Send 2c for free book * The Care of the Hair." Philo Hay Spec. Co., Newark, N. J. Hay's llarfina Soa red, h and chapped erp Sees Pimples, eases. eeps skin fine and soft. 25¢, dn he Send 2c for free book "The Care of the Skin "JAS. B. MCLEOD. Cook's Cotton Root Compound. The great Uterine Tonic, and only safe effectual Monthly Bogulatoron which on can lepen Sol ree a of strength--No. 1, : Nor F 3 10 degrevs stronger, $3; No. & 0 box sts, or seni cases, Sold all dr ips of price Dai % Py ~ -~ »/, ~S0ooK Memome on rece pamphlet. A 00. ToRONTS, Our. ELOCUTION. {Physical Culture and Dramati Ary ;mnder direction of Miss EvaGriffith ££ (Graduate of Fmerson College of Oratory) in former Collegiate Building, Clergy St. Call between 1--3 Thursdays or ridays. Permanent address, Syden- yham, Ont. od o] At All Times Spring, Summer, Fall and Winter you can buy Good Coal At our yards. "Phone. Crowfard, 1 TE -- ---- THE WHIG, 75th YEAR | DAILY BRITISH , published at {When he has established the new sys- | 300.810 King strat, Ontario, 'tem for which so much was paid to 1.8 per year, kditions at 3.90 and 4 | ° . | o'Roek_p-m. production engineers and cleaned out WEEKLY BRITISH WHIG. 16 page. {}, department of every incapable of To United | ficial and especially of everyone who bee i. F o $8 and of is without conscience. ie bent Job Print. | The people have sustained thé gov- J rapid, stylish, ernment, but with the understanding Jupry Co. LPG, | that the civil sexvice is to be purified, SE, | and the work can only be done at the { Director; cost of a few heads. TORONTO OFFICE. i 3 y OCham- St., Toronto, H; E. | resentative. | | | i | EDW. J. B. P Managing TAFT AND HUGHES WIN. The landslide which was predicted in take place on the 3rd, and so Mr. Taft was elected to succeed ' Mr. Roosevelt in the presidency of the CRIME IN ANY CASE. |W. R. Hearst, of the New York Am [through Canada last year and made | erican, has been a great force in the [several addresses he was regarded asa | national election, and Inrgely because | most likeablo person, but he has not {he has been armed with the cor impressed the American people as the | respondence of the Standard Oil com-|man for Washington. The cartoon | pany and has not hesitated to |it. How he acquired it we can only Monday may reflect the feeling of the 1 conjecture. It cost some ohe a pret- | defeated candidate. He was shown in [ty penny. 1t was not handed out by [the act of firing balls at a face | Mr, Archibold, the solicitor for the {which appeared in a huge square of trust. It must have been stolen, canvass some distance away. Twice he | and by some one having access had aimed to hit it, and failed. A to | the private records. | third ball he had picked up, remark- The New York' Herald has under- | ing, "Jf 1 don't hit this time I'll not § show {throw any more." It may be a casé how the correspondence of the great | of three times and out with Wilkam | men is #t"the mercy of unscrupulous |J. Bryan. | officials. They see where they can| The Taft eampai { taken, in a special article, to gn rested on the one work apparently will be only complete] favour of the democratic party did not [United States. When Mr, Bryant ran | use | which the Toronto World gave on | | make some money by the sale of a | few secrets, and having begun to go | assurance or pledge--that the success of the republitan candidate meapt the | only minister | is no doubt that he suffered because of Foot of Queen St. Phone 9 | wrong find themselves léd on, from [continuation of the Rooseveltian {one act of indiscretion to another, Policy. The people knew what it was. until they have sold out the men The expenditure has been enormous, they have presumed to serve. land there is a positive craze for Admitting that the Herald is cor- [battleships and munitions of war, but rect in its premises the financial mag- commercially the plan of action is nates must needs Whereafter be as safe and sound. Mr, Taft has been careful about their letters as they are | taken seriously when he declared that of their jewels, must check them over |he would as far as he could, continue at regular times and soe that they |the administration of public affairs are all there. Mr. Hearst has made a {upon the lines of the present govern- sensation, with his stolen letters, but | ment. | he bas made, by his publicity of them, | Charles E. Hughes has been re-elect- a duplication of the offence impossi- {ed the governer of New York, and so ble. . {goes back to Albany to carry out the | reforms which he has already put into THE LAYMEN'S MOVEMENT, operation and evolve and give effect to Complaint comes from" London 'west | others to which he "has been commit- that there was a scarcity of men at ted. His success is a notable triumph. the meetings which were called in con- | He has '"won out," despite' the com- nection with the laymen's movement. |binations of even his own party with But there was 'a splendid*turn out at |the common ~ enemy. His cause," how- the function where there was both [ever, has been espoused by the better eloquence and. sound sense in the dis- {element in' the state regardless of cussion of a. great issue. {party, and he is more independent The fact is that the active spirits in | than ever and the better equipped for the laymen's movement generally are |public service. He is one of the big business men who cannot attend meet- | men of the nation and has been dis- ings in the day hours without a loss | tinetively marked out for still higher of time which they cannot spare. They | honors. He will probably be tha next are not indifferent to the demands of | occupant of the White House 'in Wash- a great cause. That fact has been |ington. clearly demonstrated. There',is another fact which ought to be apparent, It is that the move- ment is not dependent on inspiration. I'he splendid addresses of the visitors NEWFOUNDLAND'S ELECTIONS. It will be a day or two yet before the results of the elections in New- foundland will be fully known. The method of counting the ballots is peculiar to the colony. The ballots are not counted when they are cast as in Canada, subject to recount or revision at the county seat or head- quarters of the riding. They are conveyed to a certain /given centre and there examined by the returning officer, in the presence of the candi- dates or their representatives. The calculation or reckoning is, there fore, slow, and several days must ne- cessarily be occupied in the work. The contending parties are led by Sir Robert Bond and Sir Edward The former was the premier for many years, a man of sagacity and experience. He had the advan- tage of pointing to a record which is pleasing in one respect, that it shows a marked conservation of the public domain, and a significant re- The revenues of made men think, as they were design- ed to do. So far so good. But there has to be organization or the results of the meetings and of the banquet will be lost. Every church should have its Men's Missionary Society, corresponding with the Women's Missionary Society, and once a quarter there should be a rally of all the lecal as there are rallies now of the Christian Endeavor Societies. In this way there will be a constant incentive to action, and a constant stimulation through the energies and eloquence of a local societies, executive. Morris. In have their ogigin in some notabie call other words great movements to service, which is heard by the peo- ple and acted upon, but definite plans can only be worked out by a devotion to details by men who have the bur- duction in taxation. the colony are limited to less than two and a half millions a year, and besides making many appreciable im- provements the government had, since its reign began, saved half a million dollars. The leader of the opposition formerly a colleague of Bond's, and left him to take up the guidance of "The People's Party." He joined issue with Donald Morrison, who was until recently his opponent. The Peo- claims to be progressive and constructive in its policy, They had a sort of national policy the working out of which was calculated to' give the island a prosperity in whiclf fishermen, -mechanics and mer- chagts were designed to share. . This sarty charged farther--that the Bond government had been content with a policy of drift. The interior of the island bad either been neglected-and it is possessed of great riches--or ex- ploited by the Reids, the Harms- worths and the Pearsons. The Bond party retaliated by saying that they saved the resources of the colony from plunder, and that if the oppo: sition succeeded at the polls they would bankrupt the people. There are some further features, the precise meaning of which is not known." The Bond party is' declared to be liberal--or to correspond, den of them upon their hearts. THE ENEMY GIVES ADVICE, There is a great anxiety on the part of the conservative press with re- gard to the liberal government. It has to be and the papers, which only a few days ago had no use for it, and did their best to have it dismissed, are now tender- reconstructed, was advice. Of course this advice will not be taken. The premier knows better than any newspaper critic, no matter how keen he may consider him- self, what, he ghould do. Hon. Mr. Templeman, of Victoria, was beaten in the election. He is the that went down. There ing it ple's Party the insane and immoral agitation over the yellow men's immigration. The government made the best arrange- ment possible with the Japanese gov- ernment upon the subject, but nothing that anyone or power could do suf- ficed to end the clamour of the agita- tors headed 'and abetted by the Brit- government. The ques- | tion is, What is to become of Mr. Templeman ? Will he drop out of pub- {lic life ? The conservative press says no. What was its attitude towards | the Whitney government when its only | minister, Mr; Monteith, went down in battle ? Didiit tell Mr. Whitney that his duty was to retain $Nelse" and | find him another seat? Mr. Whitney may have got private tips, but he did not act upon them, and he (Monteith) was succeeded by a weaker man in the | person of Mr. Duff. Then Mr. Brodeur was, according to conservative report, retired from the | government and given a seat upon the bench. But Mr. Brodeur says he will {ish Columbia of 'the dominion. = Its slogan was "Bond's day is not: dome." The. op- iposition represents the conservatives of the dominion. Then Sir Edward Morris is a Roman Catholic, and be has been reminded of this fact un- sleasantly in the bitterness of the ronflict. One further fact was en- remain to finish his work, and that" larged upon, that confederation with if there is any likeness--with the liberals | | Canada was mot an issue in the elec: tion, Bond alleged that his oppon- ents were intriguing to bring gon- federation about, but Morris replied 'that he would resign his seat in the assembly rather than be a party to § the union. : United States both sides in New- foundland were confident of success, but it did look as if Bond had the more reason to expect it. ee et EDITORIAL NOTES. The council does things occasionally. How does | yesterday's election suit you ? up large in the public estimation. | The way to find out how many scho- to enquire how many have been vac cinated. Most people have been vac- cinated, but not within seven years. 4 ne -- "The late Mr. Greenway did not sui- fer anything at the hands of the libe- ra] party. He was presented by: the | conservatives, however, and drawn out -of their party .when he first entered parliament, hecause he had a streak of independence. The Toronto News will be good 'after it has been trimmed by a few 'donservative papers in the spirit and 'manner of our local contemporary. 'Great nesve the Toronto paper has to dictate to the party generallv and pre- ghme to boss it. A hockey player, Arthur Ross, has just vefused a $1,600 job in Ottawa, and profitable. summer occupation, to accept a place in Montreal. Hockey must be one of the professions. The students can be excused for giving so much time to the game. IN LOVING MEMORY Of Frederick J. Johnston, Died, Oct. 9th, 1008. One precious to our hearts is gone, The voice: we loved is stilled, Bupty and cold the. little home, Where many a lonely hour he lived. There was an angel band in heaven, - Which: was.not- quite complete, And so God took our own dear Fred, * To fill!the vacant seat. Though racked smile, i x A ile. of 'heavenly birth, * = ~ And en the angels. called him howe, He smiled farewell to earth 3 "Tis hard to break the tender cord, When love tus bound the hisait : "Tis very to «speak We must 'on vr part. Wm. J." Johnston, Joyceville. OEAD MAN'S FACE HAUNTED MURDERER UN. TIL HE 'CONFESSED with pain he still would John XKurka, a Teamster, Tells How " He Killed Anthony Schultze His Half-brother, and Carted the Body to the Out- skirts of City. Detroit, Nov. 4.--John Kurka, a teamster, has made a dramatic con- fession of how he killed his half- brother, Anthony Schultze, ; a week ago and then hauled the body in his "Like the parties in Canada and the | At Tuesday evening's sit i | Queen's Alumni ving Sessitu iat } % ioe by Dr The ¥accination quéstion is loomingd lars have vomplied with the law ismot | ¢ THE DAILY BEITISH WHIG, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1908. ALUN GONFERENGE™ INTERESTING PAPER BY DR. In Which He Takes Up the Sub. ject, ""The World Ome City"-- Says World is Not Yet One City. mterest ames Bonar, m "The World One City." Thane : orl y ir Fcet The | r 1 Our Suits are either better or there's them that makes them sirable than the Suits' where: So the Young and Young Men know. 4 Sée Our New Harv t the of the empire at its str Pn are choner hey ve those of citizenship. The. civili without $16.50 and 918. i tions form, together, a societ ¥ Cheviots, etc., at $15. , = Nations rarely give up their languages ; Browns, Greeds ahd Ofeys, $18, |* _ = east dH and the best hope is that the republic of nations in the future will be hilwgnal oye { would then become ore with. ts with- having for each rate nation its old ' lan e and for them all one common | medium of interpretation. Yet to have | one language does not of itself lead to | perfect upion, any more than to have | ote sovereigh. City of Reason, a | City of God, is conceivable without any | earthly ruler at all. For the hardness of our hearts and dulness of our heads, | we at present need outward govern- | ment, both for things profane and for | things sacred. There are not éven | signs of 'the disappearance of eat | powers. What is probable is a political | alliance or good 'understanding of air We want to the civilized powers--these several powers still remaining tlie relations of | ¢ : all the civilized powers to each other | men in general, as you wait. to may become as peaceful as the relations | be gloved. between Britain and the United States. | A sense of. common. intérest 'may help | Sma to bring it,: common imerests, commer i. We are not exaggerating when: tial and; industrial. "The capitalist leaps | we say ours is the largest "of over natibnal. bounidaries already.. The a for Me he tow Shope ol employer 'cannot go quite :so 'fast and | . . a3 B.. } far, and the workman still less fast and | yo. : less far. - But the Jaws. titat affect trade | That's why we and industry, are tending to be more | oy ve 'wan similar in all civilized countries. 'There | ry glo . ' b, must be mternational action for. the spc- | cess' of y+ social "reforms affecting | fabor." Even our colonists :do not feel they are in one city with the eat |, tome... Else why those tariffs? The fact is the economic migvement is to- wards ope city, but the political towards large empires. , The world iis not yet | city. We must strive to make it | one, by a cosmopolitanism.that is consis- tent with the best' (but-only with the | best) kind of patriotism. Free trade, and trade 'even not free, will second | our efforts. We must try to raise the lowest, not only in our own country, but in the subject races of the empire. "Let us educate our masters." remind you, Sir, of NE A a 3 See Our Great $1 Street Glove See Our Splendid - $1 Lined Mocka Gloves, ' Men's Gloves, RE = "New Sweaters New Caps The H. D. N out violence. We have too little faith | in the power of our own civilization, | | our ability to Glove you and all cant "satisfy your] Don't wait for an attack of the 'grippe to force you to buy your Heavier Underwear, gob it now and be ready for the frop in tem- perature. yi i - Wools "in 'great ' variety," Cash- Tere, Naturgl - Wiool,. Camel's Try Our 'Special 50¢. 'Middle Weight. he 1 . Try Our Special 75¢. Wool Ger- ments. v ' , 4 r = "5 #Try-Our -Spec ial ments. 4 dh Try ~ Our -- $2.50 Combination Suits. FR Ma « New: Neckwear . - > New Shirts "Bibby Co. WN $1 - Wool - Gar- ? or we should believe that what has drawn us upward, will draw all men up- | ward, whatever their deséent, history, color, or language. FROM PRINCE ALBERT. iin, | Interesting News From This Far dump waggon across the city to the western outskirts 'where it was found. | The condession: was made near the | spot where the body was found. The | police had dressed Kurka in the| clothes he wore on the morning of the murder, mounted him on his waggon -and had him drive across the | city from the Schultz home to 'the | woods to permit several persons to identify him if possible as the team- | star they had seen in the neighbor- hood last + Sanday. . «After he had fihished the gruesome task and had been identified by several people | Kurka broke down and admitted that | he killed his half-brother. He said | that Schaltze and his wife were quarrelling and when he interfered Schultze attacked him. "Then I let! him have it with the hatchet," said Kurka. "His wife and I loved each other and we wanted him out of the way. Mrs. Schultze helped me put the body in the dump waggon and I | drove it away. I feel better now. '1 was haunted by Schultze's face ever | since I killed him." | PLANS AND MODEL ------ Of Summer Hotel to Be Exhibit- ed Next Monday. Dr, D. R. Dupuis, of Chicago, writes to Dr. Ryan as follows, regarding the summer hotel model and drawings : "Mr. Graves and myself will leave for Kingston on Saturday, arriving Monday, 9th. The exhibit we have is quite extensive, consisting of a plas- ter model seven feet by eight feet, and correspondingly high; also a painting seven feet by four feet, together with numerous color. drawings of the in- terior and a number of blue prints of the architectural plans. As these will tequire considerable space to exhibit | properly, I have written John McKay to secure for us some vacant shop in | the. most prominent locality, where the citizens can come and go at their pleasure. As I understand that the council has appointed a committee to confer with the committee of the board of trade, this in effect consti- tates an entirely new committee and | we could therefore make use of this | shop ¥oom also as a place of general | meeting." | Black Watch |! Black Ping of | production worthy of his own fine re- | known | Sydney Jarvis, {David~ Todd, | Reaney, | Clarke, {knap, Inez irion Mills and Eleanor Pendleton, | son Bay Ideals with » i {that far northern clime, which resists {among women This evening's lecture in Convocation Western Town Hall will be given by Prof. Adam | : a Shortt, formerly of Queen's, now civil | Prides Alpes, Alberta Oot. 26.--~The service commissioner of the Canadian {% dif 8 irty miles into Shel government, on "The Settlement Of | rages ot has commenced and the Labor Disputes." | Fasidents of Shelbrook may eat their To-morrow 'evening, Prof: Dyde con- | Christmas dinner at Prince Albert. tinues -his lectures on art, dealing with Jie oui Songiste of io teams of "Ruskin's Pathetic - Fallacy." Biblical St Alben' Ladies Co mie topics will constitute the remainder of |, =~ ° 05 a The I ollege will soon to-morrow's - sessions. "The Book of trict Toa ho . The Prince Albert dis- Daniel" will be discussed by Rev. Har- | leachers' Association will hold per Gray, Dundas; Rev. James An- 18 Sopvention. | Fei Prince Albert on thony, Watertown, and Rev. F. D. Rox- ursday, and Friday, November 5th burg, Smithville. "The Book of Reve- | and 6th, South African veterans met lation" will be dealt with by Rev. James | °% October 128k: to discuss the recent Binnie, Tweed: Rev. A. E. Cameron, | regulation promulgated by 'the inter- Melrose, Rev. J. R. Conn, Napanee. tar iment in respect to land Some of the young men have gone to the lumber camps for the winter. Times are looking much brighter than | they have been for some months past. {Duck hunting is the order of the day. | Game is plentiful. There have been a | few cold days and some snow, People are (who have hved here for years, say | there is generally a month of fine weather after the first snow. John Among the principals are such well- {Soles is about to move to his farm people--as Arthur Stanford, [near Crystal Plains, where his father Edgar Halstead, H. | now lives on his farm. Lionel Walsh, James | A great many are moving to their{ Donald McLaren, Non {farms now before the cold weather sets Leavitt James, Stewart Bel- in. Prince Albert can mow boast of Bauer, Rose Winter, Ma- {ar¢ lights. Good light is ome' | thing this city is lacking in, many of | the streets having only two or "The Wolf." lights. Of course, the main business "The Wolf" is a drama of the Hud- : country in three acts, and water in the the rugged manhood of | year. AT THE GRAND. Elsie Janis '"The Fair Co-Ed," on Thursday. Charles Dillingham has furnished a putation. in this respect. There three acts in the piece, all by Homer Emens. This cast is a large one. streets are fairly well lighted. this river "is very low Prince Albert is mourning the loss d defeats the plans of an adventurer i mg dy It will play an en- [fever on the 22nd ragement at the Grand on Saturday, | buried on the 24th. November 7th, matinee and night. It hascheen said of the play that in | THE "RAINBOW CLUB." construction it is truly dramatic, Wt! ---- | Members Held Very Jolly Party at Cushendall. stirs you and does not let go. In this downright interesting drama, you get The residence of William T. Gor- don, Cushendall, was the scene of a sense earnestness and. genius in | the handling of the theme. !jmuch merriment Monday evening, when about forty young people from Kingston drove out there. The af fait was conductéd by the "Rainbow Club." This is an organization of \young latlies who 'are very prominent in Ki 's social J A very was: the inst., and was It Cures Corms Quickly. Putnam's Corn Extractor is.war- ranted to cure corns without pein, in a few hours. Give "'Putnam's' a trial and' you will be satisfied. It is sure, safe and painless. Citizens of New York are rallying in every quarter to the support of the crusade against unnecessary noise, and in many neighborhoods petitions are in circulation praying the board' of to pass the much needed nances without delay. {of Mayor:R. 8. Cook, who died of smoky but pleased at having had .a A good time. MARINE NEWS. What is Found About the ¢ Wharves. ~~ The schooner Kitchen cleared Faicthaven to load coal. Swift's : Steamer Aletha, from bay points; steamer Belleville, due up, to- day. The steamer Rosedale is still on the government dry-dock, having a new wheel fitted on. At Richardsons' elevator : Steam- barge John Randall, is loading wheat for Washburn; the stcamer Acadian ar- rived from Fort William with 75,000 bushels of wheat. ' M. T. Co's elevator : The steamer Glenellah arrived from' Fort' William, with 75,000 bushels of wheat; steamer Turret Cape, with 70,000 bushels of wheat, due from. Fort William, to- day; oe tug Koy P. Hall tasived from Montreal, three light: barges and cleared for Montréal with three grain-laden barges. the Kidneys Then let Dr. A: W. Chase's Kidney Liver Pills prove their power to cure. 4 Let urine stand for twenty-four hours and if at the end of that time there are ite of a brick dust i or if the water becomes v ' and cloudy you 'may be sure the kidneys are deranged. ' Another very 'symptom of kidney disease is pain jn the small of the back. i The letter 'quoted 'below tells how these symptoms overcome and kidney disease cure Dr. A. W. Chase's Kidfey-Liver Pills. Because of their direét and combined action 'on both liver and ols ' these pills cure he t complicated case : i. W. Smith, a veterap of the i ar at Revelstoke for '