PAGE FOUR. P006066000066650000000 'THE WHIG, 75th YEAR bis life THE NEW WAY { Smallpeice, i To Hang Storm Sash Simple, practical, per- #® fect, economical, ideal ventilation, solid com- y fort, Easily hung or re- moved from inside at any time by ar.y person. It's the ossrwife's joy for clean windows, Price 15c. Set. $ AT CORBETT'S | Ontario This woman says Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound ured her. Read her letter. Mrs. J. A. Laliberte, of 34 Artillerie 8t., Quebee, writes to Mrs. Pinkham: ** For six years I have been doctoring for female weakness, heart and nerves liver and kidney trouble, but in Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound ] can safely say I have found a cure. ** I was continually bothered with the most distressing backaches, headaches, and bearing-down pains, and I kept grow more and more nervous. ia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com poun relieved me of all these distress- ing symptoms and made me a well woman. I would advise all suffering women, young or old, to use Lydia E Pinkham's Vegetable Compound." FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN. Yor thirty years Lydia E. Pink. ham's Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, has been the standard remedy for female ills | and has positively cured thoussds o: women who have been troubled wit} displacements, inflammation, ulcera tion, fibroid tumors, irregularities periodic pains, bac kache, that bear ing-down feeling, flatulency, indiges tion, dizziness or nervous prostration Why don't you try it? Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick women to write her for advice. She has guided thousands to health. Address, Lynn, Mass. FOR THANKSGIVING. You will want some Home-Made Mince Meat and here is the place to get the good old fashioned kind that mother used to make, Also, our Pork Sausage Meat is just the dressing you need for that Thanksgiving Turkey. These gdods are Home-Made 'Phone 570. H BRS THE VALUE OF i COD LIVER Olt No physician would dispute the value of C D LIVER OIL in nervous and pulmonary diseases, if the nauseous rease did not so derange digestion as more than counteract the good done the therapeutic principles of the "Ta "BRICK'S TASTELESS" there is no reste, I Is {crested the appetite, stimulates igestion, invigorates the nerves be pon. them, and CURES Coughs, Colds and Bronchitis. Ite timely use is an insurance against 0onseq ences, as the wea ened to germ diseases, sit yvbola and Typhus ent tee with sxory 2 bottle ence of our faith in Preparation. "BRICKS JASE LESS is put up in Sighs ounce Bottles, retail (50) cents, and in Swenty "5 ounce bottles, retail price one (1) na matchless thera vtaatr rrr +e * v for the orders you have given us during the past year For Coal assured than I r favors and avor in the continue pats , then most people Phone 9, Fo of Queen St h | regard DAILY BRITISH 806-310 King street, ja $6 per J oar hditions te { 1G, Dublished at | Ontatie: and 4 30 clock p.m | "WEEKLY BRITISH WHIG, 16 pages. published in parts on M and Thurs- day morniag at n A year, To United States, charge bes to be added, making A Bt Pally $3 and of A. 0 year. yea : = one of the best Job Print- ing Offices . ER anade ; rapid, stylish, | d cheep work ; nine improved presses. The British Whig Co., Ltd, EDW. J. B. NBE, Managing Director TORONTO OFFICE. Suite 19 and 20, Queen City Cham- bers, 82 Church 8t., HorOnta, Hi Representative Daily Wiig. HOW THE MONEY GOES. Announcement is made, through the Toronto papers, that the government | of the governors of Toronto university with to the School of Education. The scheme involves the erection of buildings, and their equipment at has approved of the plans an expense of hali a million dollars. | | There Will be a public school, a high school, and a Normal College, and the site for them will cost $100,000. [ic the bete ndire This large sum will be charged to capital account, and will he part the two million dollars which of the | | governors were authorized to borrow | for educational purposes. one finds fault with the government because it spends so much on educa-! tion, but when it is so generous in Now its policy towards the Toronto uni-| versity, which is not doing, and can- all the pedagogical work in it should be a little more] liberal in its grants to Kingston. A $9,000 a year to the School is not wor- not do, paltry of Pedagogy in this city thy of the government and its much- lauded educational policy. KAISER GETTING WISDOM. The kaiser has suffered a severe jolt. He made a mistake towards the in his rashness French, all growing out of a miserable Morocco incident, and is probably reduced to a more serious mood in consequence The emperor is an impetuous per- son. He wants to be doing all the He limelight. Common something the credits while, must be in rnmour him with having on his staff intellec- it to keep him posted on what is going on the to put into his which he state ocveasions reproduces with trical effects. The Harden is style. So the kaiser is picturesque in tual fuminaries whose duty is in world, and mouth the language on elec- the his ff editor of type picturesque in his epistles. The interview which he handed out regarding his conception of the Brit- | ish plan of ending the Boer war was conceived, and it made that the q O8 a means not wisely French- of | ase such a commotion Moroeco affair follows 'ha Rut been a humiliation for his had diverting the mind, in, this pect it succeeded. the result has majesty. His governm?nt has to retract its words. I'he emperor is not likely to act on the Harden advice, and abdicate. He pleases his people in many respects. He is warlike. He is a German of the The honor of the fatherland But he Germans. ne most jealously guards. is too impulsive. He must, thoughtiul of his followers confess, be indeed culti- more careful, He must vate some of the reserve or initiation of his revered father and grandigther They counselled. spoke only their advisers They and these were as ruled through their governments, generally composed of serious-minded 'men. WILFRID'S FUTURE. In the late federal election the rally- "Let Laurier Some beople premier does SIR ing ery finish his work." that WAS, have contem- the not appeal to the people The matter plate another Perhaps not is regarded sufficiently important to invite discus sion and the Canadian Courier--one of the truly independent papers--has an opinion to express. "Why," asks "should Wilfrid to our contemporary, Sir retire has the strength serve his coun: try ? ness, and there could be no better ample. Mr. talked tirement and-did actually from public life to ecewpose his soul to life free from the distracting of earth; but he quickly emerged from that atmosphere of aloofness: and calm at the led his party to victory and then on an battlefield. Great politi- retire; they life-time Gladstone re- with a view entering "the future worries call of a new issue, and ent irely new die. to trick Every question, public utterly the average cal leaders de not Men who have given a public service cannot learn the of private citizenship. a great re- they others with the must brings to them sponsibility which are unable 'to leave to of They prestige indifferent shrug speak; their the note of leadership. good health anyone else tariff reform householder. their busy and gives to lightest word Imagine Chamberlain in and attempting the moyemefit in Britain ! When Ruvosevelt to and even and in retirement; to lean talks retirement he is compelled bury himseli in migd-Afrieca; expect the turn and lead again in the fature. The Cowsék | view of (he case. The man who followed polities for the E. | - a French-Canadian. no | led to the | platform | unpatriotic as the more | thought | while he { him to ve- | re publican hosts | THE PANY BRITISH as, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1908 time, whe has been diverted from his business or profession until lit has left him, down and content himself. Better wear out than rust out. What Sir Wilirid Layrier thinks of 'the future, or of the time when he may be relieved of the cares | of. publie office, no one knows. He has said nothing which can reveal his thoughts. It can be accepted as cer- tain, that he will be ocen- pied in some useful way and of ser- { vice to his country to the last. cannot sit however, PATRIOT VS. FANATIC. The Nationalist (Asselin's paper), | and the advoeate of the Bourassa pro- jgramme, thinks Sir Wilirid Laurier {won in the late elections because he is That is the view of the narrow-minded man, the politi. cal fanatic, the pessimist, the dis- gruntled individual who has disturb ling or distressing dreams. Perhaps it would be more accurate to call them nightmares. heavily Something sits very upon the Nationalist's pros- and like the man who has eaten a rarebit before retiring for rest he has awful feelings. Laurier of the Nationalist. | trate figure, { He has Laurier on the brain. the Henri the fact that | patron of the nationalist party, Bourassa, Yet one recalls laid down a programme some time ago whirh specially appeal- French-Canadians. It em- braced 'the purification of the body politic, a resort to education as the | basis® of the public | affaix s, and an appeal to race for the larger view of | greater place of the French people in life, had national Ome carefully it programme or only to contemplate the the exemplification of Bour- and if the leader of the na- to see in rassaism, tionalists poses for anything it is be- he is of his race cause an exponent and religion. 'Hence the suspicion that some people in Quebec entertained a while that Bourassa was making self province that he hoped out as the leader of the ago, namely, a name and a place for him- of Quebec, day in the and some to blossom French people and the probable successor of Sir Wil that recent elections and the defeat in rid Laurier. True, the them of all the candidates whom Henri was Bourassa supported. Against the claim of the Nationalist stands the fact that in Ontario Sir Wilfrid among the Laurier won many friends -- English-speaking people-- he was a French-Cana- but because he was a man who mind and person, not because dian, was pure in a pa- triot and one who impressed all who heard him as a sevious-minded and sincere man. KE DITOR] AL NOTE S. Ss 'fair So the * clause of a con- That tho decision of a judge in Winnipeg. wage' tract cannot be enforced. is Senator Perley is still attacking the Trunk Pacific railway. What does ho hope to gain by pursuing this Grand poliey ? of truancy to The age be raised to 16. ) school too soon, Good. Some children are leaving and the school an: thorities are helpless--as the law now stands. the president's secretary, Taft cabi« Mr. Loeb, is slated for a place A dent's business can surely in the net. man who can run #he presi- take care of a department of the government. The Bond goverpment has gone un- the latest It is about time some government in the der. So count shows. ancient colony adopted modern me- thods in the conducting of an election. the St hesitates He preferred Henry Watterson, of Courier-Journal, about in- concludes, how- Taft they preferred rest dicling a nation that to to | ever, they Bryan, because agitation. That's it exactly the the for since that The revival of industry presidential election showed (capital was being invested the not time being and that the tariff before | Louis has | something to do with the fluctuation of trade acress the way. The city is becoming very quiet, and it will be quieter still if the sanitary condition of it is' mot improved at once. : Now it is the Montreal Gazette that laments 'the introduction of the racial ery into elections. - Our contemporary does its weeping a little late. The mischiel has been done. -- Tidings From Tichborne. Tichborne, Nov, 10.--Rev. J. Rob- inson excha: pulpits with Rev. T. Halpenny, of Sharbot Lake, on Sun- day. A few from here attended the high tea at Parham on Friday even- ing. Mr. and Mrs. T. Duffy and son, Victor, als J. Davis, have re- turned from the west. Miss Bessie Harris has gone to Toronto. Miss G. Timmerman has returned to her home in Kingston, after spending the summer with Mrs. J. Brown. A sumber attended the wrestling match at Parham on Tuesday even be tween Bake and Brooks. Miss F. McKivor, who has faithfully dis charged ox duties in the public ool here during the past two years, has resigned. Mrs. Hughes has returned home after visitin friends here. Visitors: Miss N. Mil ler, Oconto, at P. Ritchie's; Mr. and Mrs. Woodruff and G. Graves, Harrowsmith, at Mrs. J. Brown's: Mr. and Mrs. T. Bridgen, Mr. and Mrs. Kelly, W. Brooks, at D Bridgen's; Rev, J. Crow, N. Tysick, Miss F. McKivor and N. Tysick, at J. Curls; Mr. and Mrs. J. Allison at Oconto; L. A. Cameron and wife spent Sunday at Crow Lake; the Misses Duffy, Maberly; R. Howes, Parham, and D. Moore, at T. Duffy's; Mrs. J. Curl and Miss Sadie Curl, at Mrs. H. iray's; Miss Maggie Swerbrick spent Thanksgiving at home. At Pleasant Valley. Pleasant Valley, Nov. 9.--Visitors: Miss Eva Whitty with her uncle in Kingston; Mist' Lillian and Melville Ellerbeck at Freeman's, Holle ford; Mrs. Stanley and Misé¢ Lorena Sigsworth visited at Inverary last week; Miss Marie Watson called on friends here last week. + A number from here 'attended the Hallowe'en concert at Harrowsmith; the Misses Nellie and Marie Watson, accompan- ied by Charles Whitty, at Stanley Babeock's, Holleford; Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Kerr, visiting at Petworth; Manson, Sydenham, spent Sunday at his howe; Mrs. Jerome Estes, Newburgh, Mrs. Murvale, and Mr. amd son, Miss M. Monday D. George and. Mrs.- H. Whitty Hartington, at E. Whitty's; Davis spent Sunday and over at her home in Sydenham; Mrs. D. J. Curran visiting her-daugh- ter at Sydenham; Mys. J. Ellerbeck, accompanied by Miss L. E. Grant, visited gt Sydenham, Toronto Street Market. Toronto, Nov. 9.--Wheat, fall, wheat, goose, bush., 87¢c. to 8Sc.; oats, bush., 44c; barley, bush., 353c. | to 58e¢.; rye, bush., 79%. to B0c.; peas, bush., 85¢.; hay, per ton, $15 to 315. 30; straw, per ton, 315 to $16; dress- ed hogs, 88.50 to 39; butter, 27c. to 30¢c.; butter, creamery] 29¢. to $ eggs, dozen, 28c. to 32e.; chickens, dressed, Ib., 0c. to lle; ducks, spring, lb., 10c. to 12e; 'geese, Ib, 10e. to llec.; turkeys, Ib., 15¢. to l6e.; cabbage, per doz., 25¢. to 35¢.; onions, per bag, Sic. to "000. potatoes, bag, 75e. to 85c.; apples, bbl, $1.25 to $2.- 25; beef, hindquarters, #8 to $9; beef forequarters, $4.50 to $6; beef, medi- um, cavcase, $5. to $6.50; beef, choice, carcase, $7.50 to $8: mutton, per owt., $6.50 to $8; veal, prime, per ewt., $7.50 to $10; lamb, per cwt., $8 to $8.50. Ne. Reports From Burridge. Burridge, Nov. 10.--Farmers busy behind the plough. James Shel- ly and daughter, Mary, attended the funeral of his brother, John Shelling- ton, Cole Lake. Mr. and Mrs. T. Gol- | den, are visiting friends here, Crozier is visiting her sister, Shay, Piccadilly. Mr. liam Rogers, Syracuse, of Hartington, here recently. Mrs. B. and Mrs, Wil- and T. were calling on friends And Neuralgia Colds. Laxative Bromo Quinine, the world- wide cold and grippe remedy, removes cause. Call for full name. Look | signature, E W. Grove, 25¢c | Headache idea of a beautiful woman is who looks attractive with her hair done up in kid enrlers--and she is scarce. When a woman thinks she has | good figure she looks Sisanaoined a | other women don't look as if they thought so too. Our one' Richard icy | are | Miss M. Rogers | From for pe CHURCH 'RE-OPENED, Burgess, pent Sunday with the" Holipess ad- herents in the village. Robert | Dunning has returned -- North: | port, woere she has been parents. Miss Ada Mo ton, is the guest of -- : Cole. Miss vy Bleeker, Frankford, | : spent the week end with Warden and | Mrs. Farley. Mrs. Goldsmith, Ken-| tucky, has been spending the - week | with her niece, Mrs. Gi Bedell. | Harry Fenn, who went west' in the] sarly autumn, is home again. He was | much pleased with the country. Mrs. | G. W. Hammond, C ford, is | visiting her mother, Nrs. A. Callery. Miss Evelyn Rorke and Miss Flossie Lawrence, who have been under the! loctor's care, are both much better. | Charles Callery is spending 'a fow | ays this week in Hastings and I 1 terboro. Thomas Naylor, accompanied by! his little daughter, of Deseronto, were | the sts of William Naylor ve Sunday. Thomas Key, who been in Montreal and Toronto, is] home again, Mr. and Mrs. Allan Leslie, Trenton, were visiting Mr. nnd Mrs. Mills. obert has moved here from Brockvi Robert | Dunning has been called to Kingston to the bedside of his sister, Mrs. Herbert Brintnell, who is seriously ill | Alfred Horn has secured emiploymen in Cobalt and has left for that place. wr. and Mrs. Loucks, Mrs. D. Bent were the guests of G. N. Phillips over | Thanksgiving. Charles Bradley, who lias been. living in the village for some time, nas moved back to Pie- | ton. Mr. Ellis has moved into the | house thus rendered vacant. i On Thursday morning last John Jraser had the misfortune, . while | hingling his barn, to slip and fall, Lreaking hoth bones in his left leg. ie is progressing as well as can be expected. The aim of 'the Epworth | league has long been to beautify the | interior of the church and Sunday | last saw the realization of théle de-| sire. when the re-opening service was | held, morning and evening. The Sun- | day services were conducted by Rev. Il. _Greatrix, Belleville, who preached in a very inspiring manner ta large congregations. On Thanksgiving | night the annual concert was given | in the 'church. The chair was very neceptably filled by Judge Deroche, Pelleville, while Miss Eeafa Johnson, | of Rednersville, H. Honeywell, Car: | mel, and Rev. C. E. Cragg, Foxhoro, assisted . the, local talent with the | programme, which was satred in its § In ature. AGED "PEOPLE Mrs. Sarah J. J. Windrom, of Chicago, Grandniece of Alexander Hamilton, Who Signed the Declaration of Independence, Says: "Vinol isa godsend to old people. I .am seventy-six years. old, but 1 have a hearty appetite, sleep souwmd-| ly, and feel active and well to-day-- thanks to Vinol. When 1 was young cod liver oil was dispensed" in a greasy, unpalatable form, and it farly gagged me to get it down. Vi nol is entirely different, very palat able and nourishing to impoverished blood. It is the finest tonic and strength-creator I ever used." Mrs. H. W. Avery, Norwich, N.Y..| {says : "At the age of eighty-nine | | felt the need of a tonic, something | to strengthen and build me up. For | time 1 have taken Vinol, and | found that it brings vigor and; the aged as nothing else | | ome | have | life to | will." } The reason Vinol is so beneficial to old people is because it is composed | of two world-famed tonics, --~the me- Viticinal elements of cod liver oil--and | Vinol tones up the digestive | | organs, aids assimilation, makes rich, | | red blood, and strengthens every ;organ in the body. We will cheerfully all those who try no benefit. George gist, Kingston, . s Cotton Root Compound. -- To i Ma | which depend, Sold fn three of sire --No. 0 i cases, | iron. return money to Vinol and receive | W. Mahood, drug- | { | | | wd Mrs. Charles Haig, Campbelliord, | 3 Sir John Macdonald died in har- | ex- | withdraw (i HH | presents the reasonable | has | best part of There's sa a tendeney 'toward good these days. Men dress much better than they did a few years ago. We ask men who sppreciate high grade wearables to call and see our Idte showing of Fall and Winter Garments. Not high priced because high whale ack at all. May we have the pleasure of show- ing you the season's best ? See our New Brown Overcoats, See our New Brown Suits, See oar New Black Overcoats, See our New Black Suits, At $1 5.00. See our College Ulsters, 212. 50, 13.50 and 15.00, Agents for Fownes' English Gloves, Three swell lines at $1, 1.50 and 2.00. The H. D. Bibby Co. ¥ | ---- Dainty Mode Rubbers We are exclusive agents for The Only Guaranteed Rubbers Made For Men and 'Women. Kost No More Reid & Charles. 0000. CO0000000000C000L CO00N0000000000000C CHARCOAL For Kindling Fires--No wood required, lights with paper. For Your Furnace--A little charcoal used in the. farnace will consume all clinkers and balf- burnt coal. When- the Fire Burns -Low--Or is slow in starting, there is nothing to compare with Char- coal for hustling it up. Try a Sack, 15¢., or Two for 25¢. McKelvey & Birch i 69 AND 71 BROCK STREET. | "Underwear THE SAFE UNDERWEAR INVESTMENT Every dollar invested in Pen-Angle garments buys the largest amount of underwear: satisfaction obtainable. Pen Ang le underwear is made of high-class materials exclusively. Under the fine, soft, fleasans X te feel " of the garments is "astonishes first-time wearers. Pen-Angle trade-mark guarantees the safety of your investment. Money refunded for any N SSSA a remarkable strength--a long-wearing Pendwngle gamen: defective in matprial ox wait . ra-- Waldron.