0 » 5 THE DAILY BRITISH. WHIG, TUESDAY, JUNE 21, 1910. Brains and High Grade Plumbing go hand in hand. They're peactically synonymous. "Tisn't always just matter of labor--it's matter of though'. i Modern ideas necessitate care and ingenuity; both of which we try to infuse into our work. DAVID HALL, 66 Brock St. "Phones, Store, 835 : : : Residence, 856 a a COMPETENT JUDGES. Beauty Doctors Endorse Herpicide. Women who make a business of beau- tilying other women come pretty near knowing what will bring about the best results. Here are letters from two, concerning Herpividg: "lI ean recommend Newhro's Herpi- whidle,"" ling olit; andi as a dressing ft had no superior. "(Signed.) Bertha A. Trullinger, "Complexion Specialist, "204 Mornmson St., Portland Ore," "After using one bottle of Herpicide" my hair has stopped falling out and my #calp is entirely fred from dand- ruff. vr "(Sigued.) Grace Dodge, "Beauty Doctor, "195 Sixth St., Portland, Ory." Bold by leading Iraguists. Send 100. in stamps for sample to Tne Herpicide Co., Detroit, Mich., Oge Dollar thes guaranteed. J, W. Mahood. 4 Spe cial Agent, ! I men, but there never was so large a | percentage of them in camp as at the | present time. ll warded for their service. The ordinary VENEER BRICK. BEST PORTLAND CEMENT. PLASTERING LATH. S. Anglind Co. Cor. Bay and Wellington Sts. = cessfuls SEniou 'H PARKS & SON, ; Florists | Night 'Phone 235. 9. All kinds qd Flowers and Plants y "Phone . Ww and Funeral De- R a 1 ality hipped to all 8. son. His son takes his place. He may . cl part . ak Pp . ¥ King Street. "Cliff's Real Estate Agency + ESTABLISHED 1882. Where you can Buy or Sel) Property. Also Insurance written in best companies. | GEO. CLIFF, # ct ar GENUINE 5L DIAMONDS heat than as it stopped my hair from fal- | Bot- | | at the butts. | and for the reason that he has New York City, is not satisfied with in < THE WHIG, 77th YEAR. Bim wits, pint § per year. Editicns at 5.30 and § Ty Pr WHIG, 16 pages, ts on Monday an 1 a year. as Je} ded, | King price of Dally s A tached I one of the beet job Prist- ing Offices in Canada; rap stylish, and cheap work; nine improv The British Whig Publishing Co., Lid. TORONTO OFFIOR. ali tnt, 4 Suess, Sy Ga peice, J.P., representative, Dailo Wibi aily Whig. BORDEN AND THE FRENCH, } Hon. Dr: Reaume, a member of the Whitney government and a French Canadian, appeared at; a Borden poli- tical picnic and spoke®so as to show how sweet was the communion that existed between the races in the con- rvative party. It may be necessary to advertise these things, It is not so long ago since the sympathy for the Borden party in Quebec was so weak, or the want of it was so conspicuous, that Quebec was to be abandoned to ite fate! MH the province was bound to be so unfriendly to the conserva- tive leader, or if it was so strong its admiration of the premier as to give him an almost unanimous sup- port in the elections, it ought to be least off. That was the suggestion. It {has not been acted upon by Mr, Bor- {den. Hence he takes on a tour {through Ontario the man who was !the special defender of the French in 'the commons when a desperate made upon them, and Mr. as- sault was Whitney's French-Canadian minister is paraded as an evidence of the high re- his race is held. Mr. are only gard in which Borden rebukes those who happy when they are raising the ra- cial cry. YOUNG MEN IN CAMP. Some comment has been passed upon "the number of young men who com- pose the camp. It is the tendency of the day, that the various branches of the service are filled with the younger A reason for it may be found in the manner in which the militia are ' re- rate per day is low, and it can be supplemented only by efficiency pay; and it is dependent upon the shooting Marksmanship is en- couraged in every way, and the effici- ency pay is the latest resort in order secure conditions that have not been attained in any other way. The marksman is not developed with- out patient and persistent practice. In- dead one may never become proficient not the nerve and sight which are the dis- tinguishing characteristics of the suc- shot. Endowed with the necessary physical qualities one can become" skilled with the use of the rifle, and the militia department has a right to expect it generally in her vol- uriteers, The efficiency pay is not, however, securing the results which were aimed at when it was adopted. The cause is not far to seek. The average member of a rural corps does not get the rifle pragtice, does not score well at the butts, and so does not get the efficiency pay. Without it he doeg not get enough to warrant him in going into camp at this sea- be content with the smaller pay and the country may be content with his service, . i The New Zealand plan may be bet- ter, and ultimately it may be adopted in Canada. According to it every youth must be drilled until he is eigh- teen years of age in the schools and colleges, and they must take their turn in camp until twenty-five years of age. This is conscription upon a ! modified scale. SHOULD BE VERY THANKFUL. Mr. Parr, the deputy surveyor of "the $100,000 which the federal govern- ' ment gave him for his exposure of the Sugar Trust's dishonesty. Through him the government obtained evidence which led to the payment of a $2,000, 000 fine, the conviction of several !of the thieves, and suits that may end in the recovery of millions of pub- lic dues. He was presumably influ 'enced all through the piece by a de "sire for honesty. He refused the bribes of the great offenders. He seemed to want nothing but the truth, which is the imperial virtue. And what does it teach ? One's duty to God and his fellow man. So reads an ancient ritual. To some metisthe government should have done by its public servant as well as the Sugar Trust promised to do. There is, however, a vast dif- iforonce between them. The one gave "him promotion in the service and the assurance of a fitting reward for duty he escaped the toils, that he has his liberty and conscience and $100,000, ought to make him profoundly 'thank- ful. : TIME TO WAKE UP. The officials of the Ontario govern: ment may be very clever fellows, but it is doubtful if they have any justi- fication for an abuse of civic ecoun- cillors under certain circumstances. Dr. Sheard, of Toronto, is just now storming about the blundér which Lindsay made m a filtration scheme, and he may be warranted in his cen- sure. The town had an outfit which its council believed to be very superior. it was called an Ozone plant, and its alleged merit lay in the fact that the bacteria was killed while the water was passing from the source of sup- ply to the reservoir through electri- fied pipes. The provincial health, au- thoritics examined the system and declined to endorse it. Neighboring towns sent deputations to Lindsay to sce the plant, and they went favourably impreseed. Lindsay, not- withstanding the attitude of the pro- vincial board ot health, accepted the plant and paid $7,000 for the work. Then something happened. The Philadelphia ~ engineer, who superin- tended the installation of the plant, ad- mitted, according to Dr. Sheard, "having doped the water two days before the tests 'were made." The lesson, fo Dr. Sheard, is obvious. It is that towns and cities should -~ be guided in filtration matters "by the proper and responsible officers." So But guided how ? In the examination home far so good. and In plant, of water pronouncement upon its purity ? the selection of a filtration where necessary, and installation of it at the lowest cost? In doing than perely registering a "kick" the proceeding more to roposale of the municipality whe according to its best ad vice? "The water of the Ontario towns and cities is needing close at tention, and it 1s important that the functions of the Ontario board should be clearly defined. EDITORIAL NOTES. Jeffries, the prize fighter, cannot be- lieve that the church people will when a fortune not let a contest go has been spent in preparing. for it, If s0 he does not want to speak to many of them. Which will make them very unhappy. The forfeiture of grace is an awful calamity. There is no demand just now for the immigration' of skilled laborers, or labourers that, will not go on the farm. The immigration that fills up the towns and cities with surplus la- bour is not the kind that Canada needs. That point cannot be too strongly emphasized. on his -- A filtration plant costing $20,000 is, according to Edmonton's commission- er, "going to the menagerie of white elephants which the city now posses- wes." It is time some central muthor- ity defined the filters the cities should purchase in order to save them from a fearful waste of money. -- Joe Martin, the hero of Manitoba and British Columbia government, has redeemed his reputation in England. Though elected as a liberal he is out against the Asquith government on the veto question, and will make a scene when he can. He would not be himself at all if not colliding with some one and preferably a premier. The Brockville Times does not that there is a difference between con- ditions in England and America. Ia the old country people cannoli get on the land, 10 own and work it, and in the other they can and fail to appre ciate the privilege. If all the land in England were available for farming purposes there would be fewer emi- see grants. The Late Caroline Halladay. Caroline Halladay passed over the river of death to rest eternal on June 7th, 1910, in the seventieth year of her , She was the youngest daughter of the late Ebenezer Halladay and was born in Elgin, of which village she was a lifelong resident. When a mere irl she was converted and joined the ethodist Yhurch, in the Sunday school of 'which she was a teacher of over for- ty years. Rarely was she absent from the week night prayer service, class meeting or church service, Her thonghtiulness and select religious con- victions made ber a potent factor in every circle, whether home, church or community. She lived a pure Chris- tian life, was a loving friend and wise sou EE i dt Jen dupe illness =! peacefully away at the residence of her only brother, Phil: ip Halladay. 'Her *emains will He in the family plot in the Elgin cemetery. The Claims of Clark's Meats. By using Clark's Meats can re- dues your meat bill nearly one hylf. You can save hours of wearisome work in a hot kitchen. You ean give your family a vadety of meats. You van have meat always, These are the reasons why Clark's Meats areal MAYOR GAYNOR HAS FAITH IN COUNTRY BOYS. : é Cites Glen Curtiss as an Example-- Accomplish More Because of Their Time, New York, June 21.-Mayor Gay- nor is inclined to be a little worried about the young men of New York, He says they scarcely have time to think. I they go into any business after they leave college they are in a hurry all the time, he says. The ones who don't want +5 work but have to, says the mayor, are looking at the clock to see when the time comes to quit, and they do not ac complish much. j It is different with the country boys, or the young men of the small towns, sajs the mayor. They have time to think, and they deo think nud aeccmplish many of these things which. the young man of -h: aty, or of Mew York City especially, never ac nplish, Mayor Gaynor expressed his views on this subject a few evenings ago while presiding at the dinner given by the World to Glenn H. Curtiss, FLAT CITY YOUTHS Lighty well that we won't get a mead] lof victuals except in the almshouse unless we actually earn it. And, therefore, we are alert--just to earn the daily bread that we consume; and alas ! too few of us have the time to {think over these things, that the peo- 'ple Rave in the sparse communities. As ;& result they are achieving there great things. Here is a specimen of it in { Mr. Curtiss." i VICTOR NAPOLEON TO WED, Will Make Princess Clementine His Bride. : Rome, June 18.--The news that the marriage of Prince Victor Napoleon o the Bonaparie pretender to the throne of France, and Princess Clementina, the only unmarried daughter of the 'ate king of the Belgians, will take place in Turin some time this month, aroused much vommept all over the veninsula, but especially in the ancient capital of Piedmont. The Princesss Clementina has been stopping for some time with Prince Victor's mother, at the Castle of Moncal.eri, just out of Turin, Until recently the situation at this town forcibly reminded one of opera bouffe, and it is remarkable that the theme has never been used. Hero lived Princess Letizia, cousin of the shortly after the aviator's flight from Albany to New York, Mayor Gaynor, in his customary way of getting! down to the bottom of things and! spying out the causes which lead to | certain great results, explained what | he believed to be he reason why it! fell to the lot of } small town like! Hammondsport to producé a man of | the Cyrtiss type, while New York with fs 5,000,000 people, hme not yet produced an aviator of note. "How does it happen that a young! man away up at Hammondsport, up! in the state of New York, did this great thing when no man in the! 5,000,000 down here- in New York city did this thing?" said Mavor Gay- nor. "Why, Hammondsport sounds to me like Oriskany---that happens be near where I was born up in the state, the little village of Oriskany. Mr. Curtis tells me that Hammonds- | port' consists of about 1.500 and they call the village trustee | 'mayor,' and they have very high talk up these and consequential people, and it was so when | was al hov up the state. { ; "We had a little village of three or four hundred pr -ople, wh.re we settled | every probleia in the while universe, Wa used to mest at the post ofice or the tavern, and whatever way rife. we reitled the whole thing: and they are deang that up at Hammondsport yet, And how does that happen ? 4 "We have a lot of people from Ham- mondsport down here in New York | City, that js to say from all the Ham-| mondsports of the state and all the | Oriskames of the state. The young mam up there did this thing when out of five millions of people down here! nobody has tried to do it. That is, ' except a few people possibly who have come here like Mr. Harmon and Mr. Hamilton and others wha are experi- menting here. "The reason is that these people up there have time to think. They not o I have time to. think, but they are! willing to think; and they are willing to think--I don't know how I will say that they are willing to think because they 'are thinkers, and those who bore them were thinkers. That is about as well as I can express it. "They think over all these things. They read the events of the world. They read of what takes place in France, the greatest scientific nation on the earth, where nearly every sci- entific fact starts. Even our Ben Franklin had to go over there to get an audience in the flying of his kites; and they sum all these things up and they go to work at it. "But down here our young men with all the advantages of education that we give them in our schools, turning them out of high schools with a cur- riculum greater than that which Webster had at Dartmouth, fail to do that thing for the simple reason that they scarcely have time to think. "If they go into any business here, why, they are in a hurry all the time, they are hurried all the time. Those that want to work are hurried all the time, and those who don't like to work, why, they are looking at the clock all the time to see when the time to quit comes, and, ol course, those chaps don't accomplish much. "That is the history of things down i 31 as | special to | people, | to | their | cause { Clementina Bonaparte pretender, and cousin of the king of Italy, and here also resided the Duchess d'Adsta, sister of the Or leans preiender, and also cousin, through her husband, of the king. To them came from time to time the two pretenflers on visits, and thus met in the intimacy of family ties, drinking toasts to cach other and ap- parently oh the best of terms, while their supporters glared and sparred in sceret, Between them stood King Victor Emmanuel, always cordial, always the same, extending the same hospitality both, but disliking the situation intensely: Thus both the Bonaparte and Orleans pretender have in Turin respective supporters, afd be of its vieamty to France--only three hours away by rail---they sider this town a rallying point in case of action. This does not dis- turb the Turinese in the least, as the "action" is such a dream that even the pretenders themselves scarcely think it worth while. to pose any more. It is hoped that this marriage af Prince Vietor Napoleon and Princess will reinforce a family which has very few members left. It was a big house to have died almost out in so few generations. Besides Napoleon the emperor, these wag Jos- cpl Lueien, who had seven child- ren; Maria Anna, Louis' three sons; Jerome, who had both American and European children; Carlotta, and Pauline. : Prince Victor Napoleon is descended from Jerome. His mother, Princess Clothila, was the daughter of King Jictor Emmanuel the Great, and at sixteen was marriea for political rea- sons to Prince Napoleon, son of Je rome, and thus grandson of Napoleon There are now only nine other memberg of the family, of which the men are nearly all unmardied, so that a generation or two will prebably seo the end of this wonderful house. MRS. LONGWORTH"S FADS. con a Smokes Cigarettes. Boston, June 21.--Clifton Carberry, managing editor of The Boston, Post who came across the ocean on thé Kaiserin Augusta ' Victoria with ex- President Roosevelt, has the following wireless despatch in his newspaper : " 1 hear much comment among the women passengers over the fact that Mrs. Nicholas Longworth, the ex-presi- dént's daughter, who was Miss Alice Roosevelt before her marriage, does not wear a wedding ring. This fact especially pleased the suflggeites, They regard it as evidence on her part of the revolt against 'woman's bond: age to man." On the other hand, most of the married women appear some- what shocked by the omission. "Otherwise, Mrs. Longworth fairly blazed with - jewels at times. A dia- mond necklace and a diamond studded bracelet are especially conspicuous, "Frank Kellogg appears to haye the president's ear as much as anybody on board. While Kellogg' and other friends have been sitting on deck, engaged in warm discussion, Mrs. Longworth has been sitting opposite the party. In her hand was a cigarette. From her lips she blew a faint smoke wreath here. Our life is artificial. We don't and yet we breed good people--people that could accomplish much if they had the time to do what Mr. Curtiss and his neighbors do wupin Ham- mondeport--sit around and talk about two-thirds of the time, and that is just what they do. They are never in a hurry. Dear me, they knbw they will get a meal of victuals, even though they don't do anything at all. "But we people down here know Rose Tea "Is Good Tea" All its flavor and is retained in the s breed exactly the same kind of people, | sealed pack-[miic oe omer To around her father's head. "This is not the first time she has been seen in public with a cigarette, land the tongues of women who observ- {od the event are busily wagging over it. Growing Unpopular. New York, June 11. --"Rag-time gongs and music have about served their purpose and are gradually go ing out of popular esteem," according to J. L. Tindale, president of the Mu- sic Publishers' Association of the Uni ted States, holding annual session, whe declared that public taste will henceforth require compositions of more solid nature. "Rag-time of the trivial sort and the ordinary slangy music of the cur- rent popular song will be a thing of the past in five years, he said. If is hard to understand why barroom Sips and the slang of (he streets be perpetisted in music, and such goods ought not 10 be offered for sale or taken into our homes for fire: wide entertainment." * \ Col. Mattison Dead. Oswego, N.Y., June 21.-Col. Luke V. 8. Mattison, Slst New York Volun- teers, died aged sixty-eight. He commanded the first northern regiment that entered Richmond, and for twenty years after the war he was assistant state libra. rian at Albany. : her i ----. Whence the Hot Air. Guelph Mercury. Broad. th is a. suspicion ao that this sudden hot spell is due to the hot air Mr. Borden is giving out at the conservative picnics. -- John Simon, as well-to-do merchant of St. Catharines, says he will leave Canada and go io Buffalo because his cured roll = bsoon, Princess Clotilde, |= Doesn't Wear Wedding Ring and| saddénly of heart disease,| Coleman' Vie. by piece, 186. seed, at Giloert's ¢ The H.D. Bibby 4 | fi SY ¢ ihe, We $e. ay = Col = SS The Hot Days are Coming HERE'S RELIEF, SIR. REGULAR COLD STORAGE OUTFIT- TING HERE AND PLEN1. OF IT. SUITS. SUITS, $6.00. $8.50. Two-piece homespuns. Some- Two-piece Halifax Tweed, in J thing special. Loops for belt, ; light and medium shades of Cuff button, ete. Medium and grey. Nicely made. light colors. SUITS, $10.00, Two and Three Piece Hght- weight Tweeds and Cheviots; in Brown, Grey and Greens. Beit straps, etc, SUITS, €12.50. Two and Three Piece styles Fine Worsteds and Cheviots, In shades Bronze, Greyp Greens. Beautifully tailored, y SUITS, £15.00. 'Fine Blue and Grey Worsteds Medium weight. Two or Three Piece styles. Very dressy and "genteel. Hand-tallored gar- ments. TOGGERY LUSTRE COATS. Karki, Blacks, Greys. Plain and rancy Stripes. $1.50, $2.00, $2.25, $2.50, to £3.50. So SHIRTS, Dressy Soft Shirts, cuffs at- tached, coat style, ete. New shades. Hew patterns. 69¢, $1.00, $1.20, $1.50, NEGLIGKE SHIRTS, Made with reversible collars, new, silk mixtures. Plain and fancy patterns, $1.00, $1.25, $1.50. Chambrys, ete., 50¢, T0¢, $1.00. ATHLETIC UNDERWEAR In Nainsook, Balbriggan, 50¢ a Garment. ; Mauchefus French Balbriggan, 50, 75¢, $1.60 a Garment. Fancy Hosiery, 18e, 230¢, 83¢, H0c, Men's Garters, The Boston, Sun and Paris Garter, 25¢. Hat REAL PANAMAS. $3.50, $5.00, $7.00, We have the best value in Panama to be seen anywhere in Canada. Don't miss seeing this lot; STRAW HATS. See our 81.00 Sailors. See our $1.50 Sailors. See our $2.00 Sailors Christy of London are the mak- ers SOFT KNOCKABOUTS. Pearl, Green and Brown. Something special, $1.00 YACHT CAPS. . 50¢, 78¢, $1.00 to $2.00. The H.D.BIBBY CO. fivimivivieinieieivinivieivinleielnieiisieeieiefeoieleirielejeiejeeiefeiei=leiel OUTING TROUSERS, White Duck Trousers $1, $1.25 Karki Color £1.50, $1.75 Cream Serge Trousers .. $3.00 Striped Cream Serge ... $3.50 Light coldr. Tweed Outing Trousers, belts, straps, ete., $2, $2.50, 83,00, $3.50 to $1.50, "SUMMER VESTS, . New Patterns. Very dressy stuff $1.25, $1.50, $2.00, $2.50 to $3.50. LINEN HATS, 26¢, 85¢, and 5Oc. FEDORA, HATS, Pearls, Green and Brown. beauty for A $2.00, = Christy, of London, make Koolers FOR... Hot Feet Canvas Footwear for men women and children. Barefoot Sandals for men women and children. Strap Shoes for women, girls aud children. Oxfords for men, women, boys and girls, Bathing Shoes Yachting Shoes Tennis Shoes "and Cool Straw Slippers +