hem FAGE YOUR. or meer THE WHIG. 76th YEAR DAILY BRITISH WHIG, 'published at 306-310 King street, Kingston, Ontario, at $6 per year, Editions at 2.30 and osluck, pi. : i | WEEKLY BRITISH WHIG, 16 pages, { published in parts on Monday and Thurs. day morning at $1 a year. To united | States, charge for postage bas to. be | added, making price of Daily $3 and oF Jicekly $1.50 per year. | Attached is ome of the best Job \Print- {ing Offices in Canada ; rapid, stylish, {and cheap work ; nine improved presses. The British Whiz Publishing Co., Lid. EDW: J: B. PENSE, Managing Directors TORONTO OFFICE. Suite 19 and 20, Queen City bers, 32 Church St., Toronto, Sa peice, oJ. P., representative. Daily Whig. AN 'APOSTLE OF PEACE. Sir Thomas Shaughnessy is nol troubled about the war talk. "Wha wo are preparing for a railway war," he remarked to a Winnipeg paper, "we say very liitle about it. We have Proper Treatment for Floors. Woodwork been too busy in Canada to think of and Furniture" and these preparations of i war. li we are compelled to fight for Corbett's that the same ability which has been HARDWARE. : : L than Canada." ite ¥ { a sensible man. An indirect rebuke to Polish Your Furniture with Johnson's Prepared Wax. It pre. serves and brings out natural beauty of the wood. It produees a rich, artistic finish, to which dirt and dust will not adhere. Just try it and you will see how. much better it is than any other polish. Johnson's Prepared Wax is 'A Complete Finish and Polish for All Wood © Usk it on your floors and wood- work, too. Johnson's Powdered Wax Is for all dancing foors. You camget Johnson's free book, "The Cham+ H, E defence of tho country I conspicuous in connection with general development will 'appear in its there which defence." 1 do not beliove that is any country in the world itself more successfully A sound opinion, fronx ---- - the agitators on the war question. --- a . 9 The Winter's C 1 | A VERY GOOD RULE. oa ijl The supplemental examinations of {he University of Toronto are now on Sooner or later the man who makes trouble has all he wants of it. ep ---- lays in 'The careful Housekeeper 1 while the his coal supply early, weather is Line It saves dirt 1 { ory and trouble. He . in BOL in arts, one bundred and seventy-nine obliged to rush to Mr. Coal Deal- in hundred or, at the first cold snap, to say : he is perishing for want. of fuel applied science are to He can sit down in'his cosy corn- {Under the new rule adopted by the {Two hundred and fifty undergraduates medicine, 'and one and |twenty In now hard at work save their year. | senate of the university no student FROM LEFT TO RIGHT. MRS GEORGE J. GOULD, ME JAY : GEORGE - J. GOULD the well known financier, looked the best of health as he «Business is' fine,' he said «railroad earnings excellent, crops stock masket is going up, great and growing commercial nation, and to me it seems that the o going ahead are the United States, Germany, Italy and Japan. "There is a disposition abroad to buy our stocks and bonds, future and our prosperity. t A the far north, and to have stood. for | Arctic explorations. A negro sees the vision that has been denied to so This ig the limits No use of talking avout what will be done at the next municiped elec: a "while where 'the Pole was supposed to be. Both have dissipated strange | many whites ! conelusions or misconceptions regard F ing, it. 'There is the great sea, open in places, aud unfathomable, where there wn. Some of the aldermen, the al was supposed to he land or cavernous said to the They upon leged tropblers, are con from which issued life. Both away depths evi tell error the template retirement. are .« nol the year, dences of" new men bril sure pluming themselves enough to clear many } ' a ianey of their record thi and mysteries. Both agree as to . Yu ord : i . yl! manner and swiftness of travel above Thi Some ore has found out, a certain parallel, and both are mak Cook cause he wields a facile pen and has surely is the age of discovery ing history and by makes it best, be methods as mysterious Peary 's | i } or aud laugh at the storm. Anglin' i nglin s Coal ||" eo who fails to pass the exfimination of 1s housed in tight waterprool | { sheds on clean soncrete Soors, and ts delivered' pure and. clean. P the order to-day. wt likely to drop. Anglin& Co. Jay and ane vear can" enter upon the study ol | " 3 another. 'Those who fail in some Ss. = Prices i subjects dn the spring ekaminations | are naturally anxious as to the re- It would make for the improve: of the all' the | lees followed the example of Toronto | university in' this matter. At t---- i [through an enforcement of the rule, 1 | there would be an abandonment of {the mild dissipations which absorb ' ment students if col- Wellington streets. i | | | | | { ify, 5 1] sults of these supplementals. { { | | | tooe much of the student's tame and put so many of them out of the ex- Cured Her Husband OF LL ninations. Drinking. i gas ' i Write Her Today and She will early in their college career, at Gladly Tell You How She Did It. |very outset of it, For over 20 years her husband drinker. Just as soon as the young men that the they must get down up with it | or and young women, too--realize to study, and keep conse their posings as students, there will be a change for the better: In past students have attended the failed wn was a bard He had jcied in every way to stop but ! could not do so. At last she cured him by @& simple home remedy . which anyone can give even secretly. She wants everyone who has Drunkephess 1) heir examinations. their home to know of ot The new: rule of the Toromto this, and if they are sincere in their desire would have ended the order. Most students to cure this disease and attend college for the classes vear after year and uni folly | versity y are short fo otf "will write to her she will tell them juss |i what the gemedy is. {ees t She is sincere in this | offer. She has sent this | not 2 Pas valuable information b to thousands and will giadly send it to you if yom will but write her today. As she has nothing to sell. do not send her any money. Simply write your name and full address plainly in the coupon below f aod sead it to her. 11 : . ' for diversion. TON OF THE. | TAXATION OF THE LAND. man in England who I here unfortunately -silent at this 1s ove . Lime, nS, MARGARET ANDERSON, 'and on the pe Jitical issues. of the day. * 104 Home Avenue, Hillburn, N. Y. Please tell me about the remedy you used to cure your husband, es I am personally in- rerested in one who drinks. Joseph hamberlain was the head and tarifi reform movement. Ho. forced it Mr because Mr. Bal but finally front of tne He pon made it what it7is his aySociatss and followers left Lord Cecil rebelled. hedged and hesitated, (Goshen the government I ee hot ts ols BIBBY'S GAB STAND. Phone 20l. Se J perplexing issue DAY or NIGHT Lord has attacked plunge in" favour of The Lloyd-George launched his the pro- scheme was developing when pudget and _by 1t introduced a_ new Rosebery the land do light sudget brcause ol ate proposed Would Mr could ? Chamberleam the taxes Cliff's Real Estate Agency ' ° ESTABLISHED 1882. Where you can buy or sell! property, Also Insurance| F'n written in best companies. others, } if he Not. long the the subject radical of has revived these said on ince, when he was a racheal Some one credited them to him like so con entiments and that in this matter, Lord titutes himself the spokesman of a FF la to which he belongs himself, GEO. C LIF 9 | 'who toil not, neither do they spin,' 95 Clarence St. fortunes, as in hi many Salisbury whose case," have criginated "in grants made long ago for psuch services as courtiers !]inas, and have since grown and In creased, while their owners slept, by the levy of an unearned share on all toil to the general men have done to add wealth and prosperity of the country bat other by snd labour of which théy form part." Maryhe i My land 1s mn imes have changed sinee this, the the same position 'and the the Casvment' Chamberlain said but of it, and they are not con- than then to ~~ Lowers { gributing, any more now burdens of the state. eo -------- MEN MAKING HISTORY. Cook writing, and the enlarged story which the PROCRASTINATION surpasses Peary in descriptive TIME GOOD INTENTION he gives of his travels, now running aL AK ™ u {mn thy New York Herald, makes very | interesting reading. Peary has his {fr icnds, ling some, and may lose them all, by PROCRASTINATE LOSE NO TIME DETERMINE NOW DON'T . many of them, but he is los- | , Sm | jis persistent attacks upon Cook. The | squabble is most unseemly, in view of | the relations which for merly existed { between. them and his great cause m Us Your Order, CRAWFORD, 'Phone, 0; Feot of Queen Sy. which they are concerned The osten- sible oct of the dxpedition was to the hitherto unknown se to®have penet ol | of travels that are entrancing in their i for good , company, eVea study, render | the capacity to describe what 'he saw North Pole, 969 finding of the that Me in graphic language. thuseldh was not when dominates | he died but only 78. Is the Bible years The one thought that there any Pearv's mind, apparently, is that | thing on which one will Cook may share with him the glory {presently be permitted to believe as as of the Polar discovery, or rob him of {rue 2 his financial -- interest in the story { There is in his the clear or | The Whituey | | 1 government "scorns | the of an exaggerated: ego, and it is. poor {idea that any man 8 debagred from | case stuff test of the placed beside commission's ; x 2 i . : for evening meditation when | the courts and in any Hydro-Electrie work { Yet { the o the « picturesque outline | Hon. Mr. Fov deries. every one fiat the court order to the contracts it aquality. Cook's letters ave not fiction, hie must have in and they show that if only one white. {ave pass. upon com man saw 'the Pole, as Peary asserts, mission's work, or the he must have been present. {18 enforemg. ----------t-- A CHANGE IS NEEDED. | The Canadian Courier is of The state department has not calm- it that the y wuy © 88 s : we people and | a2) ommission ha not power | ie nough to secure the reforms at i which it aims." Well, let parliament { i imterocted [an the legalized energy whieh | | the dm | ression Intercolonial rail ed the disapproval of the disposed of the protest against ies a charter to the Manhattan Racing Association. "Those issue of it. eontrols. 'Government ownership | iti this charter had owned a charter de Ro . sired, | and sufficient reason it had . | is on taal, and failure is not issucd by the Ontario governmont, and beets cancelled. This circumstance alone ! The Hebrews have heen observing | sufficiot to was cause © hesitation | the Jewish New. Year, and 50 quietly about issuing another charter to 'the that one hardly: khew what was go yp it had assumed wo jing on until the festivities were over, | new name and gine the promise of a Do the feel s bike some people and want te | | | | | our fwends, Jews, ever new line of conduct. other The stale department's defence is [swear off something: at New Year's tl that it had to issue the charier ' when [What 4s their besetting sw, an} Lway ' certain formalitics were complied with it, owl that it had recourse Dr. the morality department of Ye bnied President Taft is out a jnling {of paver 13,000 niles, and will Me fcover a large part of and | he He +s like a king, | touring and he He is | i i + the people and indirectly 3 we ng the peof € and 1nd red y sam | i tod for no other procueding Chown, of tl . us : the the territory thodist church, quotes the law that it the (not shall) respond to th which poverns points out BY S depart among his subjects, meat may : " beisg honoured as a' king. . request The idea that 'may' som times means "must," and should bx oe pling when the their views on public questions so interpreted, was, rejected ; His next p.essage Lo copuress will re Ontario Free Thoucht A ociation ask- {veal some of the impressions that ar «ol for incorporgiion and was refused now. being made : \ Dr. Chown goes further and asks | - ther: 1s the reeord in a single case in OOOO ; : es GHO0 which the court compelled the mam i o which lus | '4 The Man 4 | On Watch. : Why is it, asked the Lampman, that so few of our army officers were cap of passing their examinations, a ta anced by % the ) id nre two little, stories | bearing on this matter: Re cently a very | prominent townsman, connected with a college, remarked to the Lampman that he had scveral sons, and it one of them turned out to be a dull boy. he would im a lieutenant in the army The her story wis this: A militia office who commanded a corps not far from Kingston, had a dull lieutenant and he which involves the legalizing wanted to get rid of him [he lieuter ant wanted to join HE permanent tore; so his commanding ofheer used his m- fluence and secured him an appoints remarking to another officer that REE militia required much brighter officers EDITORIAL NOTES. than did the permanent force, becaust Mr, the - C.M.A. 311 sergeants and instructors of non- : 'commissioned rank did.all the WOIK said the government could | whereas in the militia, the officers them selves had to do it. The Lampm de rush | clares that many bright young men can 2 gnter the army as officers becaus haven't money or the pifik-tea social standing. He 1s told that some . S young men who were in the on Fou 1d country came to Canada, to enter the | the ar + the examinations that are ter to issue a charter haat refused It is abounds in chroed |, that car loss the state department, and a charler wa that, in one instance issued which «abled a company to 3 in a disseputable and iradulent the capud prosecution only by cugage business, manager of whach' «5s 11 clearing out. | *™ 2 . Bias x bail. PF a] vas recently an and "forfeiting his bail. vom all | aners? He to of which it is evident that parliament should, at the carliest opportubit | | panes the criminal = code and by at wovide agamst ih issue of charters 1 g : of associations of a There automatic performance of to any Compan | (quest ionable character: should bet no duty a. business which the govarnment or the = pacliament which it represonts | i i cannot readily endorse. 'Graham, at Hon | banjuet, 'not he stampeded on the tan - ques tion. Who has heen trying to it 2 1 they | The Toronto News wantst a domi : Y 3 no good 1 cotfservative cpnvention. GOULD, Miss MARJORIE GOULD AND ME. New York, Sept. 17.--Returning with his family after a long tour abroad, dissussed trade prospects here and abroad. big and everybody hopeful. But things are looking better here than anywhere and I do not believe that they are parting with many, although there is always some trading. They have the ! Monday, Sept I gro g | what purpose 3 To%et wome of x discontents ease then selves by IN will no doubt keep the orma . Has M 1 their proper place enough trouble-on-his hands? chronic grouching ? Borden not , Te : yan agrees with Sricish | there are many C british | on the street who should be a: ihe , and he also ag Frustee Me that | youngsters should be 'kept icture shows at n He often 3 walks up Princess the even- ings what kind of men and 'women the present generation = will make twenty five years her When the Lampman ated he daren't poke his e. out the front fence after seven o'clock eo evening, On Satugday evenmgs can the bao Ite Hon. Frank Colun.bia Press ° Oliver, at the convention, . said it | was the ambition of the average edi And Jit an &ditor is i the tor to mould public ovinion. as was the experience' ol many street 3 that public opinién woulded him | Pearv s success to we wave suf i a fespised that 1 black. | wi " } was red sit § ear coloured shave lores ol hous Mr. George J. Gould, The else. is 'a nly countries in the now greatest faith in our om---- and prepare for the Sabbath. He dare n't whistle on that day, and was at all services in his church Nowadays, things are different, parents allow their children to do as they please and roam the streets at night. Sunday is ill-ob served. And so many parents seem to take no heed of warnings. lI heir off spring wander - about the town after dark: And the young girls, what of them? the Lampman asks Princes street at night tells a sad tale. Ihe Lampnian tells me. that people would he very much surprised if they knew somte of the townsmen who have been living here and claiming to be bot! Canadians and Americans [hey hav been voting in Kingston for years past taking tlie oath that they are British and yet they are registered across the lie as loyal citizens of the United States where they claimed 1 have been born or to have lived for some years. There will be very few oi these people left on Uncle Sam's popn latiofi' role, the. Lampman tells me, fof the . United Stat doesn't want thos kind of * * who want to vote il both i stric have subjects, yyalis suntries. Their names are being from the and will , be satisfied with being British of the milk and water type. they subjects ur town council coming to? the Lampman asks [It surely is trying to exemplify scenes of days, when Kingston councilmen hadn't learn ed 'the modern delicate vay of saying & man was not telling the truth. he Lampman remembers those old days when it was not an unusual thing for ¢ councilman to arise in his place and declare that another councilman was a liar He thinks that his worship the mayor last Monday evening should have called wpon. the giant sergeant-at- arms to. have ejected a certain cotmgil man when the latter declared he would- n't obey his worship's order to sit.down It would have been a grand scene, he says, to have watched Sergeant Snodder ove the unruly member of the wes- ard What 1s « bygone y lax, ~I{ the tax fails to pass or let the people take note of the councilmen who vote for the high tax, and snow them under wher they present themselves for re-electiol next Pinnary Ihe Lampman notes thal 'here are jour councilmen who retire this year and who are voting for the high laundry tax Next January with a changed council board, the tax can be reduced if the present council fails fo do it--THE TOWN WATCHMAN In regard Lampman- ha law to have in S------ Where Municipalization Pays. railroads can be pro nducted on a less than 5-cent fare basis, The gross re venue of the Man chester municipal 1 ilways for the vear ended March 31, 1909, was $1,345,507 nd of this $734.066° was net, an mcreasc of $10,186 over the prions year The carried 155,000,000 passengers of whom 67 per paid ents hev also deliver parcels within half a mile of their lines. They handle for from four cents each npward [he net profit this parcel delivery Svs \ Municipal street ably ce railway cent y fare of tw 5s $8.352., eer The Government's Single Duty." Ottawa {t 1s not enoug to be to the charter gives no privileges which art not already accorded the proprietors of the Woodbine and the race tracks at Journal. Flamilton Erie, and Windsor I'he s that "he Dominion govern i hos affronted the against track gambling in Canada [his is a case i which atthe beg wold. have. he casicst i} longer the error remains uncorre more difficult # will beg act the way heirs are ones that attach wings to Always say "rood morming vou meant it Cured her Father's Drunkenness bya Simple Remedy. The money as il an receip mp, Correspondence confidential, THE SAMARIA REMEDY HB Jom Chambers, Jordan St. Toronto, Cane Also for sale at J.B. McLeod's Drug Store. Kingstan, ming the best way sud | | eres eeeeisssssistle Our Boys' and Children's Clothing Depart. ment is a busy place these days. Call and see the new garments. 3 We wish Every mother a look at ' Our $2.50 Suits for Boys, 4 years to 11 years of age. - Our $3.50 Dayton Suits, of age. Our $5 Collegiate Suits, 10 years to 16 years of age. Boys' Suits, $2.50, 3.00, 3.50, 4.00, 4.50 5:00, 6.50 te: 1200. 2 The largest and most complete rtock of Boys' and Children's Clothing betwee: Toronto and Montreal. in town-would take 4 years to 11 years NEW POCKET EDITION ERE is news indeed--for the two million who shave themselves every morning "with the: Gillette Safety Razor. The New ocket Edition ofs the "Gillette" is in such compact form that it may be carried likea cardease in the waist: coat pocket, or slip ed info the side of a traveling bag. Same size blade as before --same principle--but more compact. The pocket case is heavily plated in gold, silver or gun-metal-- plain, polished or richly embossed in four- designs. Inside the pocket case are handle and blade box--triple, silver plated or 14K gold plated. Prices, $5 to $7.50. : : You will see them in every window--those handsome "Gillette" signs which indicate dealers handling the "Gillette's Just look for the signs. 80 THE GILLETTE SAFETY RAZOR CO. of Canada Limited . Al Su. 63 St. Alexander men (CA Few Specials to Clear CE This Month 3 Pieces Parlor Sett only 215. % " Mission Dining Room Sett, early English finish, 6 Leather-scated Chairs, Round or Square Table and Buffet for $55. Brass Beds, 2 inch posts, $18. Some smaller sizes only $13.50. 2 ey i FANCY CRAWFORD PEACHES TrCHBAP. re Watermelons, - 10c and Up. Bartlett Pears for preservingor table use AT