Fe kam POUR $000050000000000000000 READY ROOFING Following Brands in! stock: SURETY, BRANTFORD, SPARKLOID AND CAREY. Thickness 1 ply to 4 ply. Price to suit your job. An Asphalt Roof does not rattle jn the wind nor magnify the noise of Peltine rain, 3 gin & Co Office and Yards: Cor. Bay and Wellington Sts. 8 Sessessssssssssssssese GEORGE WASHINGTON'S QUEUE. We Hid * la Lusuriant Suit of Straight Very Dark Hair, The om of his Country concealed a. Tuxuriant suit of hair beneath his queue wig. Many now wish the old were in vogue, to conceal thin- ned hair or baldness. Yel no one nesd Gutasittianln is P : : 5 : "rmve thin tmix-norbe- bald, if, he eure {* the dandruff that causes both. Dan * druff can not be cured by scouring the stalp, because it is 5 germ disease, and the germ has to » illed. New- "bro's Herphcide killg the dandruff germ ~mo other hair préparation will. "De Muvy the eause, you remove the ef: There's no for dandruff but to i the Hold" ding 'dreggisis. Send 10¢. in stamps for sample to The Herpicide Co., Detroit, Mich, One dollar bottles gnarunteed. J. I. Mo Lead, specink agent. hhh bhbbbbhbbbih The American Cafe 185 Wellington St Up-to-date Restaurant House. | Separate Well tu The and Eating appartments. and lighted. Try our Full Courses Dioner, be. THOMAS GUY, Prop. FEROS RERERER REIS Black and Blue Serge Suits Stugle or Deonble, Sizes, 34 to MM. Prices, $12 and S15. These Suits are especially good value, and equal in quality style and fit to any tailor-made Suils TWEED SUITS st $0.50, $7.50, $10 nud 912. WORSTED SU as, Nice Browns and Greyw, $10, 812 and ¥15, Boys B-plece Bults, fine tweedy good wearing Qualities, $4, $5 to §7 . Boyw 3-plece Bults, $3,756 to 84. i go Wh, w i" i ISAAC ZACKS 271 PRINCKSS STREET. LF ex re Sieansers. and Visitors are 'Invited to Inspect my big show- ing of Antique Furniture. J Buitable prices. Best quality. L. LESSES, § Cor. Princess - Stsitam Ste. : 'Phen Will Buy or on i kinds of Furniture. Highest prices. = \ the house embarrassing to him. (discharge all citizens free to ipade where 8 how H Sulte 15 and ins 32 Shuzeh. st, Sram ~ Daile Wima. " {and inviting her entrance OFFICE. 20 Queen City cham. THE DATLY BRITISH WHIG, THURSDAY, AUGUST 10. 1911. " that the national policy introduced by | would continue 'in the position . "so Sir John Macdonald was solely for! tong as he is able to superintend the the pose of being "'ased as a le-| | affairs of this important office which ver ph open the door to the Am: {be Eas filled with such-distioction for erica market." It has taken years the past fifteen years." to actamplish this; last October. found | TORIES BOUND TO n Washington ready to receive Canada| : with 'her|The Candid Opimion of a Liberal natural products. Paper They Like to Quote. poin Huntingdon Gleaner. a Jus. shut Joes The situation on Saturday was an through the open ier before the House of Commons door are the trusts and mawufactur- irom the United: States to have free ers. Their opposition is not for! jsnade in farm products, with one-third what. reciprocity is, but: for' what !0f the members determined by hook k : or crook to prevent ite acceptance. they thought it would lead to. Mr.!|aurier did what be could not help Drury quotes leading farmers, some doing, he appealed to the electors to of them stropy conservatives, thor deci whether those who favored reci- oughly acquainted with the market procity or those against it represent conditions and others in their line, PLANNING FOR BARLEY. Word comes that all along the Ontario 'shore of Lake Ontario - the farmers are quietly preparing to put' part of their acreage in barley, says the Montreal Herald. ;They "are not saying much about" how they are going to vote, but they are counting on having barley to sell across the lnke next year. The case is like that of the minis- ter's wife who was upstairs packing the trunks while her husband was praying for guidance about accepting ® eall {0 a larger. church. : There is as much polities in the lake counties .as anywhere else, if you stir it up, and a farmer who votes tory as a life habit isn't keen about announcing any change in view. This time, however, he sees that it is the farmer's turn. So he prepares his field for barley. LEAVES WITH REGRET. Universal will be the regret that Sir Allan Aylesworth, minister of jus tice, is to retire from the cabinet, owing to an infirmity, deafness, which is increasingly making his presence in It is 'penerally conceded that he has been the best minister of justice the minion hs had. No minister in cabinet has been more honest upright or more conscientious in the of his duty. His dis tinguished services both as a cabinet minister and as its represeniative at The Hague tribunal has brought honor to his native land. Sir Allan Aylesworth has been es pecially" regarded with esteem in Len- nox and Addington, in faet in all of the eastern counties, for he is a son of the soil; he reflects credit upon the old high school at Newburgh, where his early training was begun. He re- turns to | bis profession--the law-- where he has distinguished himself as do- the and tlone of its brightest lights. His sucosssor as' minister of justice ix likely to be Hugh Gughrie, M.P., of South Wellington. The Laurier ad- ministration is keeping up with times in bringing -new .and young blood into the cabinet. Mr. Guthrie is & man of untiring zeal, a keen debat- er with a natural ability of a high type and there is every prospect he will prove himself an honor to the country and to the important posi- tion to which he has been promoted. WHICH WAY-FOR CANADA ? Shall Canada . take the approved British way of freedom and give to Canadian farmers the privilege of ex: changing thejr products in the nearest markets and buying and selling ny suits them best ? enquires the Globe. Or shall Canada take the discredited American way and make it unneces- sarily difficult and expensive for the men who produce wealth by their own labor to get. for themselves the honest returns for their toil ¥ and be counted in this the men who would is to campaign, it is ¥ prevent Canadians selling where they g | please and buying what they Niwho are the real traitors to British want tradition. It is the great British way to leave and imports they please. Britain 3 from foreign countries three times as much merchandise as is imported from all British possessions combined. The he sured the farmers that he had tiled the sentiment of the country, The is- who say the reciprociiy agreement sue is definite, for the question put to each elector is, Are you for recipro- would be a great advantage to the ¢ity ? and the answer must be either peas Some of 1 Ton quot: vel or no. It is to be regretted _ the po Og | 9 issue should be thus narrowed to a are James Anderson, secretary of gingle question; for it would have been the Eastern Dairymen's Association, preferable had Mr. Boden. {she Dr. Publow, interested in dairying, Thomas Johnson, of Norfolk, ister- ested in fruit growing, and Thomas vote on reciprocity to be takeh and then forced dissolution on the general McMullin, 'of Seaforth, €n beef pro- duetions. 'record of the Laurier administration. Tt faces the electors for the best act i® has done, the negotiation of a Mr. Drury coneludes his very inter esting letter with these words : "In the coming elections two arties treaty to open the United States' market to our farmers. The 21st of i September will give the answer of the farmers. Mr. Borden's excuse for bringing on will come before the people, rr ~election. bdlore ribution --ie cal party, now {n power many years, unworthy of him. He declares he ad- and with a record some things in vised the government at the begin- which are not what they should be, ning of March to hijten the censié so and the conservatives, fresh from as to permit the age of a redis- yours of opposition, irsesponsiple, with | tribution bill. How pould the govern- very little record of any kind dmtng ment fly in the face 4 the statute en- those years. But the cooice must be acting that the censys must be taken made, not on past records, but onlin June? By bringiic on an election present. stands. The liberal party before the census Feturns are in, Mr. now stands for a measure which haé' Borden has disfranchised a million of been ardently dedred by all parties newcomers in the west. Sir Wilfrid's in Canada for the past forty years, | address magnifies reciprocity and di whieh will be of great material advan- lates on the obstructive courses of the tage, and which is but the first step | opposition in trying to prevent its ac toward the overthrow of the whole | ceptance, unrighteous protective system, and! ' ng the robber trusts which shelter be- | Kezema Cured for 25c. {hind it. It is opposed by the Cana-| Wade's Ointment cures eczema and dian interests, which were willing to all similar skin diseasés. At the same put up half a million last winter for | lime there is no more perfect reniedy a corrupt advertising enmpaign; {for cuts, Burns, cold sores, chapped which are' doubtless now willing to | hands and other minor skin troubles. contribute liberally: to the campaign Try it and you will never be with- funds of any party which will defeat | jout it. the: measure: by the American inter i ied eczema, salt rheum, scaly or ests which have failed to defoat the i) me sruplichs of the skin, pimples, measure in the United States, and are Be. es, J, andrull ete. Tn big boxes, now hoping to defeat it 'in Canada, |= * ** V0 Melood's drug stores. and by a group of conservative poli-| Lo {ticians 'at Oftawa, who in opposing| Sérgivs Sazonoff, St. Petersburg {reciprocity are reversing the forty Russian minister of foreign affairs, | year-old policy of their party but {who has heen seriously ill, under- who, for some , occult reason, have went an operation during which" a) seen fit to line up with the worried part of a4 rib was removed. Later it interests. ~ The choice is not hetween | wag said that the general condition of, liberal and Papservative, but between | ho pationt, including the heart adtion, the people and the trusts.' was satisfactory. i hkovah "Mealth |e. « Salts, three tins EDITORIAL NOTES. "Prouse's Drug Store." Sir John Macdonald, in 1884, asked | FDebentiire : ae @ How To's pi Busdars 10 am. 30 T pn ' DRS. SOPER & WHITE L « 26 Torunto Street, Toronte, Ont. |. i FOR SALE $400.-Five per cent. Domin- ion Permanent Loan Company ar and interest. 3-4 Acre a -- Plot adjoin- ing City. Lots and Houses ifiJ* any part of the City. West- ern Lands and City Lots. J. 0. HUTTON, 18 Market St KINGSTON SALES. CANADIANS MAKE One Result of Removal of Restrice tions. When the United States duty on cream was five cemds per lb. no Can- adjan cream entqred the United States. The duty was reduced to five cents per gallon in 1909, and in the ¢leven months ending with May last $1,603 000 worth of Canadian crenm was sold there. . In 1896, when quaraotine regulations TAAAASEAAALASLLAAA IA. INVEST VLLBTBOGON as well as duty Darred access to the United States, we shipped only 1,646 | cattle to the American market. In | 1899, as 5 consequence of the removal | of the guarantine restrictions alone, | we shipped nearly 93,000 cattle to the same country. Brockville 'and Ogdensburg. Friday, que both 8 am. ways. ealling at Ganauno- Steamer America, 50¢. return, the farmer to stand by the high We | iff until the Amerighns hd what they have now done. annm--r-- Sir Charlés Tupper, in 1888, as his bet to get for them an ment of the very sort Mr. has obtained. agree- Fielding Woodstock Sentinel Review A significant feature of the cam- 'Thete is every assurance that King- | paign against reciprocity so far is will remain in the liberal col javoiding a straight discussion of the umn, The workingmen are with the proposed Sgveagal : i 3 ven after the opposition has had its farmers on the reciprocity issue. "They |wighne gratified. dnd the proposed sce better living with the agreement {agreement has been submitted to the force. | people, the conservative speakers and loaders are nlortally afraid lest the of alpeople should be allowed to express and tell {30 honest opinion in regard to the {matter And so the contention is heard that reciprocity is not the sole issue; it must not be considered by iteell, . but that everything that can be done must be dome to divert the attention. Whe fear, of course, {is that if the people were left to settle the question of reciprocity in their own way on ite merits, the vole "in favor of reciprocity would be © as strong as the feeling in favor of it is known to be. But where argument fails it is al ways possible, and frequently useful, to. raise a ery, and the ery been rai that reciprocity wSuld mean the loss to Canada of her commercial independence, and eventually of her national independence. Ohe is not surprised to see such clap-trap in a newspaper like the Mail and Empire, but. something better was surely ex- pected from a man like Premier Whit ney. It is to the credit of Leader Borden that he is slow to avail him- sell of the arguments that seem to satisfy some of his followers; he con- tents himself for the most part with raciaimin his opposition to recipro- eit leaving the arguments to tal ond of themselves. The actual results of reciprocity must, of course, be determined by ex- perience in the future. But experibuce in the past may serve as a fairly ser- viconble guide, and there is nothing in the experience of the past to cause lo hesitate. The only time ory of this country when the lowilty of any section of the {Canadian people might have been re. garded as shaky" was before the old T--ireciprocity 'tremty of 1854.. With the adoption of free Srode by Great Brit: » in the ston on its merits. A policeman told the wife prisoner to take bim home hit what she really thought of him. Somebody should tell, that policeman that the golden rule forbids such cruel punishment. A minister who caught a pick: pocket trying to rob him on a street car, gave the fellow a sound - drab ting, dragged him fromthe ear and turned him ower to the police. That | clerfryman is on the wrong job. He should be a policeman. It is not correct to say that con- servative farmers have been convert ed to favor reciprocity. They have always favored reciprocal tarifis. It ts the party leaders who have been converted to oppose thal idea on ac. count of the influence brought to bear by capitalists of the larger ci- ties, "This campaign cannot be run on one issue," declares the Montreal Gazeite, and the declaration is quoted' with approval by 'other ocon- gervative newspapers. The signifi- icance of all this lies in the discov- ery that with reciprogity for the issue the comservativeh would noti; bave a ghost of a chance. Sir William Church, provident of the British Royal Society of Medicine, is not sn optimist about immediate re sults from the work conducted by the imperial cancer research fund. This dread disease presents difficulties that the scientists, It seems that : GI gist her lot with | was in sxation manifesto the 175F i tine' that Lord WHAT RECIPROCITY HAS DONE FOR CANADA -------------------- sold ha Jesiprosity will bring eom- Canada, passed through Ontario (then Upper Canada) to meet the president of the United States, who was then at Niagara, for the purpose of mg reciprocity with him. then as now, possessed, or thought it possessed, a monopoly of the loyalty of this part of the world, and so it | was that when the queen's representa- | tive appeared the streets of To- | ronto he was greeted with a shower | of missiles, none of which took effect, | | discuss Toronto, on however, It was early that the proper | emedy for the conditions then exist ing in Canada, mcluding the craving for annexation, was in securing access | to the Ameriean markets by means of | eciprovity. ' As early as 1549 an offer was made by Canada to remove the ditigs from natural products if the United States would do the same; but | it was five years before this offer was ucoppled. "The Feciprocily" treaty was | ratified in 1854, antd-providéd for the free admission from one country to | the other of the products of the farm, | the forest and the niine With the ratification of this treaty { came the end of the annexation move ment in Canada. "Bees lighting | cease to hum," amd the prosperity thas came §q Canada as the result of | the reciprodity agreement of 1554 put an etitl 16 poplar discontent and de stroyed the trade of ithe political | agitatore 'It came into active opera tion in 1855)" kaye McMullen in his History of Cansda, a work which can | be confidently recommended to the | general reader, "and gave a vast 'im- pulse to thy commerce, and- prosperity | of all the Northern American colowies; | but Canada was immessurably the largest gainer by its provisions." Oth- er writers bear similar testimony. Frank Basil Tracy, in the Ter centen ary History of Canada, says: "This | convention was undoubtedly the best | act of intercotrée with the United] States that Canada had ever secured It was a striking change from the old days of bitter enmity, and as long as | it remained in operation it was al source of great profit to Canada, and really in tl ten years laid the foun-| dation for the prosperity which the country has never ceased to enjoy." Such was Canada's experience in The | past with reciprocity. It should. perve | seen i | the | 8 useful guide in forecasting the | experience. of the future, When we are) on_thix country snd fe national independence that the effect of in years . ity was to lay the oundations of Canada's prosperity, and to put an end forever to the 1849 fort to-day than she was in 1554, strong. the | commercial and the national life of thotight of annexation. We may be told, of course, that eon ditions have changed sines 1504. They have. Catiada is ever wo much sirong- er in commercial independence, stroug- or in her national life. H thers was any danger to Cabada from reci procity it was in 4854, when both the then: goversor ddfion of its fusure provperity. Canada were at their Jowpet ebb. Yet ¥ then gave the éowntey u L treciprocity wew nstionsl fife, and laid the fous: | ¢ [| # ; i i i $ ' | * IBBYS LIMITED Men's and Boys' Departmental Store | wo en Jy New Suits for Fall 1911 Yes Sir, it is an absolute fact that hundreds of the best dressed men in this town are willing to hold up their right hand and swear that they never experienced full satisfaction with their Clothes until they 'commenced buying "here. NEW SUITS FOR FALL 1911 HH ii = S 0 T0350 39009004949543 0400300000040 G400 0 Atte ttt alate tiesesne Sasser cers TRLLLLLETELSE. ssdsseasesssssscsasses poh "1 9 Jb Ul A Heavy Scotch effects. Don't be afraid to ask us to show you those New Suits for Fall at $15.00 that we advertise. We fit the body, please the eye and suit the purse. Make no mistake. We are prepared to deliver the Goods special to your measure at $15.00 in 2 hours time. "The Young Man's Ideal Clothing Store. BIBBYS LIMITED 78-80-82 PRINCESS STREET Gers rsvrsrsssassvssssssan@ Press sssssassrssssssss u Peressssssssssasssessssfiffrssssssasasssssassas Men's Low Shoes ALL AT CUT PRICES Men's Low Shoes, in Black, Tan and Patent Leather, $4.00 and $4.50. CUT PRICE 83.00 Men's Shoes, Tan and Black Regular $2.50 and $3.00, CUT PRICE . .. . $1.90 -- H. Jennings, Sete eessttSessRNTRen ssssssesssssansassansag 1 i 4 PH asassssesesl Geo. Maller & Son} Cleaniog, Sew Laying, Bleyeien, Geo Carts snd Baby Carriages repaired. (Limited) "Highest Education at Lowest Cost' Twenty-sixth vear Fall Term begging August 20th, Courses. in Book ke oping Shortvand ela. Civil Services snd Eog- the Telephone 1033, HINGYTON, best Our Eraduntes Zot positions Wit hin * & short Sime over sixty re posiiians wilh "one or th Sarah oy IWWy ors portions a Canada. Enter any time. Call or write for lotormsa- tions. HF. Metcalfe, Principal Canada, THOMAS C OPLEY Prove 987. Kingston, & card 16 19 Pine Birest when Anything done fn the Cerpen Estimates given on all kinds ff n and mn work ale Hardwood oors of all kinds Al waders will receive prompt siteriion hop. 40 Quean Street GRAND UNION # HOTEL he eBES EAT SERS | 3 MURRAY, Second Hand Furnitare i Block of New and le Beso ture also ht Kinds of Pre- wre. Call a . Sugermans, S49 2000