¥ WOOPTONESIOIDTIN TIONS THE WHIG, 78th YEAR AILY BRITISH WHIC, published at Es King Street, Kingston, Ontario at $6 per year. Editions at 2.30 and 4 Y, BRITISH WHIG, 19 pages | n in . onday apa mareat as Te ace ba i George Andrews of Halifax, N.S, io be addsars . nf orice of Datly $2 eH o > 2 "For many years | have been troubled | At 18 one of the best Job Print- with chronic Constipation This ail. cheap BC Spa ment never comes single-handed, and 1 N have Leen a victim to the many 'linesses that constipation brings mn Ms train Medicine alter medicine I bave taken in order to find relief, but one and all left me in the same hopeless condition. It seemed that nothing would expel from me the one ailment that caused so much trouble, yet at last 1 read about these {ndian Ret Pills That was ipdeed a lucky day for me, for 1 wus so impressed with the state ments made that 1 determined to give them a fair trial. J They have Regulated my Somat and bewels. am cured of constipal and iakta ¢ th they were lai di ple are lighter now than ¥ 1 Suit thay 1a 8a oyu 4s 2 lin 1896, when the Foster faction rul- For over half a century Dr. Morse's |. Indizn Root Pills have been curing con- stipation and clogged, inactive kidneys, with all the ailments which result from them, They cleanse the whole system Piao. Savoie CURED OF CONSTIPATON Mr. Andrews praises Dr. io Morse's Indian Root Pills. | WEEK] Ursds United Suite 18 apd 20 Queen City Cham- RCC le | | Daile Whig, + DESERVES OUR PITY. The takes, (indirect), upon the peo- {he revenue from dh increased popu- lation and increased business is such that last year the surplus, on current account, was thirty millions of dol-| the no lars. Be0000000000cssnteTeeY This surplus was applied on capi- 4 tal aecount, and largely in the build . . ' ® ing of the Transcontinental railway, s Builde rs and with tHe result that, though great . ® as were these works, the addition to} : . ". ® the public debt was only about three Supplies : millions of dollars. ' ®! Mr. Fielding says that with vt ® public works out of the way, or BRICK. : ® jew ones wdertaken, the surplus of | CEMENT, e revenue on current account would wipe | ASPHALT ROOFING. : out the smtire public debt in three ® years. LATH. And 'this makes the Montreal Gay SHINGLES. 'e Teite very unkappy, and it consoles ® itseli with the reflection that Mr. | . : Fielding is "the saddesi failure Can- | 5, MLN & £0. 5 The figuring fiend of any paper that WELLINGTON ST. NORTH. worries himself into this condition of mind im to be pitied. FIKE THESE TREATIES Did you notice the talk in the im BLS LIMMABGAM Don't Persecute your Bowels Cut out cathartics and bru perial parliament about the favoured | The secretary for foreign afinirs gave the names of the affected, nat.ons treaties 7 countries that were with | which were 20 | «SN Canada, by treaties By = made by treat Britain between and 1855. Only with regard to the treaties made with Austria-Hungary and pan, in recent years, had Canada been The others were binding on Canada bat The trade with them was, Argentine ex- | cepted, insignificant, and Griat Bri i o 120 had to demounce them. These treaties will not be influenced by the reciprocity treaty, which pro- vides for a free exchange of 'natural products between Canada and the United States. A similar trade is impossible with Bolivia, Columisia, Purely vegetable. gently on the liver, Ja- igats Mieand' soothe thedels consulted' not injuriously. Denmark, Norway, Russia, Sweden, Switzerland and Venezuela in amy Great Engli fiemed . Pe Whoto ease, : Filood 1a Ie Takes DOW Apart from that the movement is Mental and Brain ey approved that Great Britain rd it Ketual Weakness, Emisvions, i : b Exeesses, sell of these ancient trade agreements, usoor ity or balled in Anything that is over a century old ne Ro is of precious little value, and because Toronto, Ont. this is the case certain treaties "have allowed a nominal existence. LIME For Sale «oi \ FAILURE OF JUSTICE, view is given of the / Le BEST FOR PLASTERING STONE AND BRICK WORK. mieux case in La Verite. This paper W. Drury, prints the names of the jurymen who 235 Wellington Street. Leen A new tried a Montrealer for breaking into a Masonic lodge and despoiling it,. in the roll of honour, that is La Verite's i roll of honor. It gives the names and | BESSON OCTIDAtions of Are You Going Away ? them French-Canadians, it so, 1 will pay the highest cash price for your Furniture and Household Effects. No commission, no wait, no trouble. Headquarters for Antique Furniture. Big stock and variety now on hand for your selection. of | lauds the twelve, all and them as patriots. | There which so elearly showed the inefficacy | never was a case in Canada | of the jury system. The common idea, | E or the prevailing idea, is that twelve | men, possessed of ordinary intelligence | can be trusted to ren- | der a verdict in accordance with facts. amd jodgment, the | This: they are sworn to do. L. LESSES, . _-- fins | he any Cor. Princess and Chatham Sts. > judge charged against him. There IEIEEASIRASEASIAIIAEAIIEAIE. was no apparent hope of an aogmittal, and yet the jury gave a verdict of \ "not guilty.' In the Uanadian parliament the minister of justice was asked if ht had heard anything about the case, and answered that his knowledge was confined 10 what he had seen in the papers. The judge did not write him, upon the verdict. Perhaps he was not required to do so. The erown pro secutor was silent. He may, under the law, be' helpless. | There has been a fragrant misear- ringe of justice, and it is causing a scandal in the land, Is there no way by which the Attorney-General of | Quebec or of Canada may get at the facts * No way of seeing whether any honor voll has been blurred with ithe names of men who have failed to ;do their duty ? MUST HAVE A POLICY. "Mr. Borden has mot a policy at pre sent and does not think he should have one. When he becomes premier, he "says, he will tell what he knows of Light on a Dark Subject COAL of course. A universal fuel derived vegeta~ { lone." | the { France in which the riots have { of throats parched and dry [eauntiny up the cost. | that | house were paid for their votes, some | un their hands as the taxi dashed up | suffered a loss of from $5,000,000 WHIG, 'MONDAY, APRIL 17. 1911. -- Bord n do with it if the people trusted it to his care? He says he will they give him the job. do. He will now, or later, or "REFUSES A PARDON them when But that have to outline WHHL CONTINUE TO PRISON tell SERVE IN will not forever | -------- And Make More Converts--A Man Who Slew a Woman Insists on Continuing His Revival Work. Mr. | Galveston, Texas, April 17.--Paul has (Graynor, thirty-seven years of age, it{ who is serving a fortysyear i in t state itentdary for murder, re this increased preference were granted | {, od a ----_-- declaring that he can it would hurt the Canadian mand-! do more good in prison than out of up by jit, and that he purposes finishing | the twenty-five remaining vears 'of; his sentence. Sixteen jquarrelled with a woman, whom he shot to death. the | At least fifteen men who served in . {the penitentiary with him have since British preference when (it was launch- jp Fp oo were. cupverted by. the ed, and opposed it. They wanted {young convict and are now leading up- something they could not get--a quid | right lives. He taught stenograpby to pro quo. Mr. Borden is invited to be | uix of thei. in prison and four hold iad {responsible positions, two of them as candid as Mr. Fielding $0 | being court _ stenographers in large give stamina to his followers, by cities. declaring where he stands. { Fearing another throw-down, (and ; ing te ? gM they are becoming too numerous 10) ill write 4 history of be pleasant), he declines to speak. |part in the civil war. What do vou think of it ? | Mrs, Charles G. Ames is jpresident of the School Voters' League in Boston {The object of the league is to study chool conditions, keg! Mrs. Clara Bancroft Beatlev has Weaker been elected for her eighteenth conse and weaker, and that it may = pre {utive term as superintendent of the 1 . : sently accept' the "Parliament Bill ** | Sunday school of the Church of the : kd ; | Disciples in Boston. It is githin an ace of surrendering. { Mme. N. G. Cheremetefi, who recent- 'ly won the Grand Priz, a prire worth Mr. Monk undertook to connect the! = oo $600,000, is the first woman who Nationalist party with the anti-recipro- | aver carried off the rich stakes in the city campaign of the tory opposition. | French racing classic. She is a great wer of horses. . | For many years Mrs. Belva Lock miscalculation | oo has devoted herself chiefly to the practice of law and has won a wide reputation as a lawyer. She is a fa- miliar figure before the supreme court of the United States. Miss Job, of Queenstown, Tasmania, is said to be the only woman who has ever sat within the bar at a Wesleyan Methodist conference. When she first took her seat one minister protested that the conferénces was composed only of ministers and laymen and that they - ; had no power to admit the best lady I'he federal parliament, it seems, is [the land. his plans hold his peace. Soin® of his friends have been anx- | "jous fpr. an increase in the British | preference. They have asked Fielding what he thinks, and he been candid enough to say that the industries built They say, at factures, the protective tariff. "Let well the same time, enough a- These same tories repudiated and Dames and Daughters. Custer, widow of Gen. Custer, her husband's EDITORIAL NOTES. The latest from England is that the | tory opposition is getting And Mr. Bourassa will have none of Ie it. Another serious that every one regrets. Think ol the waste of champagne real stuffi--in the districts of taken place. Voured into the gutters like and thousands ! Awiul, 0 much dirty water, simply awful ! not the place to seek legislation on An Obedient Driver. "Drive like the deuce," shouted | Smith, springing into the taxi. With a lurch the car darted forward and away they went like lightning {through the fog. Crash! They took The New York s¥hatorial campaign off the wheel of a passing wagon. Hi! is over, and now the assembly is' Hi! They missed fattening out a It is reported small child by two-ninths of a hak abper Clang ! « They upset a milk cart. Peo- | ple shouted, constables impotently held the marriage question. Sir James] Whitney and Sir Lomar Gouin have to be asked what they can in their respective balliwhacks, . will do | several members of the of them as high as $10,000 each. Must one street and down another, taking he flush of funds dcross the way. {corners on two wheels, and threaten- {ing every lamppost with destruction The education department has in- | At last, after half an hour's furious narrow i v | racing, ¢ slowed up in a . G. A. Anden, of Berming- | ang they s up Yiled Dr 3 A i \ ¥" | thoroughfare, and Smith, poked ham, to discuss school medica {head out of the window. spection at the educational conven-| "Aps we uearly there "* he tion this week. It should legislate hreathlessly. upon this question in order to facili- | The chaufieur turned in his seatsand h ti f the school | shouted. nie the co-operation 'of 4 f "Where did you want do go, sir ¥'|-- Loards. | Answers, : his ine asked, The mixed marriage question le settled in a Jiffy by the premier of Ontario--~the man who fears no- may | The Oak of Beaumarchais. ! London Globe The famous oak of Beaumarchais, : : {which formerly flourished on the Quai thing in earth or sky. But if he d'Orsay, has fallen to the woodman's faces this issue as bravely as he axe. The spot is historic, for in davs faced the bilingual school question it Past it was the locus of the residence - of the author of the "Barber of Se may not be settled for several s00DS. (ville. The tree has seen vicissitudes. It was under its spreading branches that Beaumarchais instructed the daughter of Louis XV. in music, and there were heard the harp of Mme Victoire and the violin of Mme. Ade- laide. In later times the sweet strains of music gave place to the fumes of a tobacco factory which was situated on part of Beaumarchais' lands. Ii the federal opposition had to be- gin the thing would sing small against the ment. The manufacturers are re treating. . So are the British tariff reformers, and they are putting up some of the money for the fight. over again it trade agree 'Quebec May Soom be "Dry. Windsor Record A vast educational campaign, aimed storage-have at th? eutire extinction in Quebec ol to [the liquor interests, including the le {galized grocery, as well as the saloon, is under way.. The province is to be sowed knee-deep 1 The butter and egy speculators--the | fellows that have been boosting prices | with the aid of cold $5,000,000, Butter that them ¥e. alb. last summer has been sold for 17e. cost < with anti-aleohol hi Eggs that cost them 25c. erature and traindl lecturers will be per dozen last summer have been go- [sent out. Quebee has now sixty-nine 13¢. The chances of Per cent. of its municipalities "dry." another corner are very slim For sixty miles up the Gatineau riv- -- jer, formerly infested with dives for shantymen, there will not be a A of N . Another Plan. sed bar after the first of May Watertown Tiues, | Lockport, N.i., has a plan for city | ro % ¥i » ~ >, government wach it claims is an im- | A Very Vigorous Protest. rovement ou the oc inwi yi § Hamilton Sines p oO e COMMINSIon system. |" qu "eons o Telegram declares that It is based on the principle of treat'... A ' ing i , : w in the matter of endowing every sort ing he, ity Sotparation. The of club with a liquor franchise Hon i olders (the people) elect a W. J. Hanna's administration is sim board of five directors (city coungil) It regards Pheu director, whe _ not Ng | the licensed clubs as likely 'to do ot Yo. five Reis x on me to the! sre to manufacture drunkards than so get no Noy ney are vested any dozem ordinary bar rooms"; and wit complete Jegia ative power, but . "_... that it'is time Mom. Mr. have nothing to do' with administra: 30 oonstructed his Toronto jon, except that they elect the gene Jdicense commissions. Things must be anager he City manager, be "pr tty bad in Tordnto when the Tele called. The manager need not be aly," fly calledt upon "to protest. citizen of the town. Tle may hail | from anywhere in the country. He is | to receive a large salary, he appoints | oll . . { Washington Star. . every gity officer; he has full power | "Whe, Dustin Stax went into Wall aud responsibility but he may be re 04 he didn't have a dollar he could moved by the council at any time. | 1 pig own" Lockport, as an exchange pats it, | 'Yes Rut in those days he was believes this is*the way to get abso- | more particular about whose dollar he lutely competent services in running 'cilied his own." . its affairs. It goes on the theory-- plenty of evidence to support it, they No More. say--that the comparatively small {poston Transcript . salaries paid under commission gov: |; She (complainingly)--You promised emment will not attract trained abil- [faithfully that you wouldn't smoke ill {any more after January lst. serve for the honor of the thing when I am simply keeping entirely relieved of administrative de [up the usual amount. tail and asked only to meet occasion ally for legislative ing at 10e. to licen ply the worst on record." Get Over It, ¢ Vears ago Gravnor | Specialists In diseases of Skin, Blood, Nerves, Bladder and Special xt ments of men One visit advisable ; if impossible, send Dbistory for free opinion sad ad- vice. Question blank and bdook on diseases of men free. Consultation free. Medicine furnished in tablet form. Hours: 10 am. te 1 pm. and 2 to 6 p.m. Sundays, 10 am. to 1 pw. S. J. WILSON. & CO., Member Dominion Exchange, 1ad., Write for Prospectus and Map of] «++. .. Jupiter Mines, Ltd. .. ....| CORRESPONDENCE INVITED. 14 King St. East. "Phone Main 4298. TORONTO, Ont. { WHAT MAKES US TIRED, ! en | Fatigue is Called a State of /Poison- | Lane ing. = | Fatigue is a state of poisoning. The | muscle is a machine comparable to a | locomotive, - since it carries its = own | fuel. The muscle fuel is stored up in! the muscle if the form of animal | starch, or glycogen, which, in use, is! converted into carbon dioxide and lactic acid. These products are muscle | poisons, writes J. H. Kellogg, MLD, | in the February Good Health, When | present in minute amount only, as at | the beginning of work, they increase | muscular. irritability, and so ------i work easier--that is, a greater amount | of work is accomplished with the same | effort. This fact has been proved by | experiments upon animals, and ae ounts for the "limbering up" exper ienced by both men and animals at] the heginning of exercise. The jockey | always "warms up" his horse before | he puts him to a test of speed Rest cures fatig because it affords | opportunity for the removal from the blood of the paralyzing poison with which it has been filled by work. | Rest renews the capacity of a muscle for work, even when the muscle ia re- moved from the body. A pig's muscle cut out of its body and made to work by electricity until completely ex- | hausted is ready for work again after | a rest of a few minutes through the | renewal of its supply of oxygen. Fx hausted men have been at once revived | by the "inhalation of oxvgen. Experi ment that athletes are | made able to accomplish greater feats by the inhalation of oxygen just be- | fore the supreme effort is made has shown New-born Babies Salted. The strange custom of salting new- born balves is Still practised in cer tan remote regions of Europe and Asia. The moiher imagines that this custom brings health and strength tol her children, and also serves to keep | away evil spirits Among the Armenians of Russia it 1s the custom to cover the entire skin of the infant with very fife salt. For three hours or more this is left op the baby, when it is washed off with warm water. Even more peculiar are the women of a mountain tribe of Asia Minor, for they alleged to their new-born ered with salt ty-four hours. The modery » prin kle their babies salt, and even parts of Germany a child at birth are keep habies cov for a period of tw Greeks 4 with in certain salt is | «till used on ------------ Nearly as Bad as the Plague. A letter on the plague in written from Changchunau, savs of the further infection China, precautions against "At Changchanau the Russo-Asiati bank and the Yokohama Specie bank alone of the foreign establishments re main open. Both buildings are disinfected every and every cus tomer these hour, enters, is douched not as he fluid, whether he likes it or Every employee of the bank, from the man ager downward, wears a white smock and a nosé and -mouth pad. But notwithstanding the plague | the ordinary as if nothing were: happening, strepts still remain i Chinese coohe goes ahout | and the ! eatin Sra The Weedmark murder trial { county of Lanark $1,500 i in which the dremdful tragtdy was en acted is pow being torn down. It das the landmarks Smith's t the | house | one of Falls disinfected | arevasse. ered, BIBBYS lini Men's and Boys' Departmental Store New Spring Suits Travellers' Samples. Your Pick $1 5 for Forty-eight New, Nobby Spring Suits, an extra sét of travellers' samples, made in the latest Emperor and Count Styles. Fabrics are New Lirey Tweeds, New Fancy Worstede, New Scotch Tweeds in Coronation Plaids. These Suits are $18.50, $20 and $22.50 qualities, Bibby's Special §15 New Trousers We are making a specialty of $4.00 Trousdrs. New Imported Worsteds and Scotch Cheviots, Regular $500 Trousers. Bibby's Special, $4.00 BIBBYS Limited 78, 80, 82 PRINCESS ST. GLACIER YIELDS ITS DEAD. -- a | Forbes, = British export in believed. that the After | 8lacier would be reached b jin tort years. his onsidered bold, but its accura it by the event. In fort of ee brought the be Alpine end of the the bodies rs, Body of Swiss Guide Released Twenty-three Years, #latement was The body of ¢ s. perfect] we: | borne served, has been yielded up by © 0 he flow ~ with | the Swiss glaciers, af {twenty-three Londo fell into via ately years, st Henry lost in glacier. In Lh save Arkwright was bit Bits, In just thirty-one vears his body was IS5S the guide | br received a His appearance unchanged by { mayor of Chamonix long imprisonments in the ic be ad found. Fvers here have been other cases of he [of clothing s set. Hix bringing back of held for years in the the ice. Ons of the first record relates to the Hamel which occurred in 1820 were swept down by an avalanche hurled, into a Hamel phesied the glacier would yield them in the LOO years, but Pre telegram from the that the article name and learly on his gold pencil case : cantly as when he ident, {had last + i, ve de Several guide ns stating been a long lost hod, i n on « vend close enflrace instances on | wiles before and | peo 1s | peace disturber Sanitol preparat Mm.' crevesse ronch 1% slwavs a Libaon's course of -- Why Shouldn't Your Boy Wear Olothes That Are Made for Him? * Nothing, is more disappointing to the sight of the average mother than to observe youngsters dressed in a fashion which suggests the style of their elders. Child ren are children for such a little while that it is surely every mother's desire to have them dressed In clothes made especially for them And this, fortunately, she is enabled to "Sanford Juvenile Clothes.' In a special children's department, a « corps of special designers, cutters ana clothing craftsmen design and make clothes for youngsters. That Is, the; do no thing else but make juvenile of hes Patterns are cut, cloth selected, and with nothing else in view but the Special of children do if she buys styles chosen, requirements shes" are sold and drs goods to fee the new You will range of Twvenile Cle by the leading othing stares in Canada Ak Bring and Fommer models find in them a ean piete styles and sizes SANFORD MANUFACTURING (0, Hemilton. "Sanford lad, pa esm------