THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, FRIDAY, JUNE 21, 1012.° CEDAR SHINGLES I -- In spite of the large sums spent on adver- tising other Roofings "there is a vigorous demand for Wood Shingles. They are favorites, being last- ing and true, Various grades sold y s. Anglin & Co. Wellington Street Nort "Phone 66. An English Chemist Has Discovered How to ; Grow Hair Jam "In England the ladies have entirely ~abandoned wearing rats, which is due entirely to this new discovery. t.: It has been proven thal Henma "Teaves contain the ingredients . that will positively grow hair. That they contain this long-looked-for article is proven every day. : i The Americans are now placing on {/ the market a preparation containing the extract from Henna leaves, which is having a phenomenal sale. This preparation is called SALVIA and 'is being sold with a guarantee to cure dandruff and to grow hair in abundance. Being daintily perfumed, SALVIA makes a most pleasant hair dressing. A large generous bottle can be purchased for 50c. Summer Suits See our Bpocial goods, latest worth for the Only $6.50 per Suit, 3 Pleces. Cannot be -- finest splendid Bargains, #tyles and money. equalled city Also higher grade Greys and Blues at $16.50 to $18. Fine Tan anywhere In the Buits, $10, in Browns, $12.60, $13, and Black Metal, Button and Oxfords, Laced. "ISAAC ZACKS, 271 PRINCESS STREET. [COAL The kind you are looking for is the kind we sell, SCRANTON COAL is good Coal and we guarantee prompt delivery, Booth & Co. FOOT WEST STREET. Gun Experts in Lace Curtain Cleaning It is not safe to send your expensive lace curtains to be cleaned. It is only experts who can, be depended upon to do the Work right every timo. Our people are, experts and nearly 35 years' experience has taught us the best way. © R. PARKER & 00, Dyers and Cleaners, t 0 Princess St. Kingston, Ont. } FURNITURE WANTED, Anyone havin, Furniture, : Toth : b Stov es, Boots to Sell drop a card ore disposin es, be- to H, SUGARMAN 342 Ontario St : pposite Craig's Wholesale, rect FONG SING has removed to 383 Pri to YMCA. First-class -Work guaranteed. of il Practically new, for Sale. ANTIQUE FURNITURE. - { line in the city. Will buy, sell or exchange. HOUSEHOLD 300DS Bought and Bold. If you are giving up house, I will buy all your goods. L. LESSES {uatisfied, and would have {|e lost heavily at the outstart. * |The cleverest politicians at large were [covered in the seating of delegates, $3,000 1 Mr DAILY BRITISH tario, ot $8 per year. 1G, published ditions st 2.30 To ning at $1 a year. ne ¥ of Datly $3 and be added, making price and cheap work: nine improved pr 'TORONTO OFFICE.~Suite 1§ and Street, Toronto. H. E. Smaliplece, J. THE WHIG SEVENTYNINTH YEAR , WEEKLY BRITISH WHIG, 18 pages, i]! Thursda nit Attached is one of the best Job Printing Offices In Canadd; rapid, st: li, esses. THE BRITISH WHIG PUBLISHING COMPANY, LIMITED BA srt at 306-310 King Btreet, Kingston, On- and 3 p.m, - published in parts on Monds ed States charge for postage of Weekly $1.50 per year. and ad to J. G, Elliott, President. Leman 4A, Guild, See~Treas. ; . : 20 Queen City Chambers, $1 Church P., representative, wap Fhe schofils: have been questioned, A member of the ernment has declared that there 'were of this kind in Ontario, department bilingnal gov- not i#chools and yet proposes to reorganize them and pro- the education vide for bilingual teaching in them. The principals of the new schoos will be English will be French, English only after the scholars have passed out of the first form, and in the beginning of the second year. The transition will be rapid if the plans of the department out, and it is just possible that in the course of a short time the experiment ¢ oy and the assistents The idea is to teach are to be carried FAILURE LOOKED FOR. Prm-- ni. will be abandoned as a-failure. It may be argued that Englisu can- : not 'be taught to the purely French, since it is not taught at home. and the introduction of English has to be gradual and persistent. At time there is force in what the same Bishop | Fallon says--and he spoke out of a | painful experience, and as the result of close study--that bilingual schools are bound to be a failure. : The. sghool must be altogether French or altogether English. If can not be half and hall. that fully been so much talk and scandal, It is because tried there has been has | and | of both the people have had enough | a The coal men have been in session $B Toronts, comparing rates and con sidering a question of public interest, namely, How 1s a supply of fuel to The strike, which continued for three months, has left direful effects. be obtained ? miners' Y There is a scarcity of supply in Ox tario, at the present time, and to the extent of 10,000,000 The situa- tion might he rapidly improved if tie tons. way were 'clear for the supply of coal. jut it has not been mined, and cur not be for a considerable time. It can- be had at in sight, and not, therefore; any price. A famine is a coal shortage in this northern clime As a great calamity, When was on in England, erippling trade and com: the great coal strike merce, and stopping transportation by the public demanded . state ownership and control of mines. The state did not see of a law establishing land and sea, the wisdom this, but it passed a minithum rate of wage-in each coal district, and though the idea was at first resented, it is. now well regarded, and 'why ? The' men who have been appointed to act for the government, A STRUGGLE EL Theodore Roosevelt is not to be the president of . the United Siates for third time," and is not to become dictator of the nation. a a At one time it: looked as if this were io be the That the man came dangerously to case. near this realization is a tribute to his tremendous energy and power, One recalls the defeat that met him in several states when he butted into their elections, and in 'a preliminary test of his strength. receiving his jolt Any other would have gone permanent obscurity. But he emerged from his retreat at Oyster Bay with new plans and purposes. and it is truly wonderful how he forged to the front, man been into No one expected him to do fo well. He whs against an opponent of great popularity. Mr. Taft was his ception of The ideal candidate. Mr. Taft had made a pretty good presi- dent. Mr. Taft had served the people faithfully and well. There was mo reason why he should leave office at the end of one term save and except- ing that Roosevelt was anxious to resame his rule of public men. Mr. Taft, therciore, made a strong can: didate, and one hard to beat. The 'early stages of the campaign were discouraging to Mr Roosevelt. He had con- gained towards the close. He conducted a whirlwind tour of the states, and had reason to believe that his was a name to conjure with, Suacess would surely be his when the party convention wet in Chicago. There, however, he was disappointed. at work. Mr, Taft had the best them, and their skill was soon of Xs and in the all-tooevident stealing of some of Mr. Roosevelt's supporters. It is not remarkuble that his man- agers became alarmed, and that on their appeal ' he personally. assumed jamsected, in a rare degree, what COAL FAMINE IN SIGHT. ed as arbitrators, have discharged their All | i law' depends upon a proper interpreta- | duty with a rare discrimination. tion, and the English reading of law is the best and the safest. the | United States and Canada | the people, in In this coal question, are the Philistines: "Hn coal barons can do as they please. A inthe haads of few men, who claim to be divinely led, of the | They can aceede to the de can hold up the fuel supply continent. mands of the miners or refuse then as they pl There ia no law which | regulates them. Each difficulty or sus- | | pension of work is followed by n sear- | city of supply, dnd an increase - in price. The present outlook is very dis couragmg. Something must be done to the United | States government Public cure, protect public, and the must act. ownership nat be th I'he strike when | they like, whether the mines are own may miners can ed by the government or the private corporation. The nation can. provide] for the adjustment I the United mother country of difliculties, and | the the machinery it States 18 behind in has for the setilement of strikes, FOR OFFICE. | eminently fit that he should tes | ong capacity of the convention. was not surprising that i evoke a demonstration of surpassing | interest; that Is entrano into Chi- | cago should be followed hy a politi he should ! cal eruption of an unparalleled kind. Yet all in vain. The supreme contest, over the chairmanship, should He did not Under his to ! ! one have been sufficient. poll the majority of votes. guidance an attempt was made stampede the convention, without sult. His weakest point was reached when he challenged the certain states, re- | from and became the seli- constituted Committee of Credentials. He staked his all and lost. He has given to the world a proof he has one votes of his personal magnatism; min can do when he is d€termined; end he wiil not probably disappear because of his defeat now. ILater he | may bob up sercpely, and omce more, snd perhaps with success, re:over what he regards as his birth vight, For the present he is out of running. So-is Mr. Taft. Both figured in an unseemly scrap. vorld has witnessed the spectacle of two candidates for the presidency in a bitter and nasty quarrel. They have tried to look dignified, but at times they have lost their tempers and have been pictured by cartoonists as slime throwers. How can the people esteem and respect them ? How could the man who called him opponent a thug and a thief and a liar hope to pre- side over a nation's afffrs with de corum ? The American system 'is not ideal istic. The man who occupies high oifice should reach it without dis credit. He may have his ambitions, hut it should be for the people to elevate him to a place where he may bold the balance of power and rule impartially and righteously, After oll. give. ms the monarchy as it is maintained in Britain. political the have The the direction of his cause. It was EDITORIAL If the people who attend band eon' corts in. Macdonald Pack are to enjoy seats. The occupants of those seats would not object to pay a small fee | for the accommodation. W. 8. Calvert denies that he is the mysterious dadividual who secured of Farmers' bank fl have to bresk . Travers will the oll and pull hes lo represented by [--. o---- 5 The further hearing of the North West railway grievance has been posi: poned. The loss which the country has sustained by the death of Judge L Mabee is being made more and more apparent, -- Mr. Ruddick, the federal dairy com- missioner, explains that butter is high now because it is the best (off Jume grass), and that it is being packed away in cold storage for winter use .{ delegates, | Canadian got the (be pres If New bg slice of roads its pove lax. The fede be made to ke Just now it thing. Rin said to es with them, ance upon This pulsory, Bran nis swick the fe vernmen?d ral €p 1 wil inistrat her an of the staff's" morals, sumed that he is a very The politicia ka : kention garnis copious And Bry World, says it Ma quot in, w | the references and New: Brunswick, ra ns at hed their ations fro riting fo was the did no bad ny {away for later stwdy. 15 Lhe won and it bus s Chicago speeches m serif ndoing t apd very susceptible to federal fluence has elected a conservative gislature.' It 'ig fully as' lobsided British Columbia, and will have milar experience, Later or may be sorry that the opp. Montreal's inf, osition {materially strengtiiened. thousar wa net 8 not ad, and the pec com- custodi- | 18 as nan con- | with { Mare. | r the New York |] f the small province, i ll "Frene h ine le as | A sid ile Panamas | All Our $7.00 and $8.00 Panamas now $5.00 COMBINATION SUITS, Knee length, nainsook, Special, 75¢ per Suit. COMBINATION SUITS, Balbriggan, knee or length, Special, $1.00 Sait. Special, 75¢ per Suit. NEW SHIRTS FOR MEN, New Plain Whites, ant mortality is at the | rate of 210 per the medical health officer proposes. to send commissioners how it may | MacMurchy can tion. [It the. governme has edited, , SPIRIT OF No Lessons Learned. itis Ottawa Citizer The professic | ish board whic for Line have ! disaster. In th be like the thin ocean been Bo g and forgot to be supply rt pamph THE nal ch n rs Sa) rarned it case urbons, noti reduce 1. Dr. the infe 18 to "be had gratuitously let whicl board Sare of Is Men. Toronto News Europe to find out | Helen | re { in | 1 sk PRESS te | must } who learned po-! Ve have a prime minister who appre- the retlects pre ciliates Who seriousness ot the sent: ple and wi the ment i, th C ol may be depended upon to act prompts ] ly with the ac nuralty which person. Ivice he is ol Lhe abouv 2» British it to see Mr. Rowell's Work. Toronto Mail "Though his (Mr. the-bar campaign will not serve political ambition, | bebalf will not be lost. Should he syc- developing opinion ceed in his 1 abar in to point _of demanding that the bar abolished, Sir James Whitney's ernment, alway If there is a of M. Paderew hands of some South Airica thing to However, lame man 1o-be de ons be and wantonly the atheist wi the saints in lieve. The So see nothing noise" when |} gently," ace aboard ship. you, said to.an in Elizabeth a g a most insul them came up took hold of and said, you ?' ing for an a Paderewski, Campbell Grand Trunk thirty The company keeping back again. pictures and statues treal-Sherbrooke ya Keeping t the {public opinion, and always responsive It {to it, will eliects the reform. pace Paderewski. truth trea ny ski's » South must be in be niable it 1 ficient in tion of music or painting, said that his deficiency defect. But when he carries his lack of | appreciation into the insults w not understand, he is as cul 10 makes a of whom he ¢ uth Afni mp rev ie wrding to "1 don't Padepéwski is rey terviewer, roup of n ting me 0 me me by the nswer, and Bros'. was playing educated Straw Are the popular ones. See in the tment a bad both artistically and morally. it indifferent to" may any it 1S a7 artist's ¢ hat he L r Ko i the God oes not 8 who wski's | playing were entitled to their gnor- ance, but they cannot be defended for requesting the pianist, "step his » have wat an behav One » street and pel of coat. He put his face close to 'You're Paderowski, aren't He then went off without wait he and friends roared with laughter." South Africans, comments an English newspaper, are not uj G. Delaive. a conductor raflway, « line, years, is charged he claims tokets to on nm His for the with has sell Hats them. ad k | Rowell's) abolish his | that the be gov- with | £1.00, $1.25, $1.50. NEW BLUE CHAMBRYS, With separate $1.25, $1.50. OUTING SHIRTS, With soft collar attached, 75¢, $100, $1.25, $1.50. BOYS' NE Soft collar attached, Blue and mauve. SPECIAL, 30c. PETER PAN SOFT COLLAR and Tie to Match for $6.50 report at the African citizens, way | art, be for a | apprecia- | cannot moral dos as if the | and he could mno- that Port ed in| of | my mine his Some | » to the Mon- past theft been them It would be all right if the coneum NEW ONTARIO MEN'S UNDERWEAR POROUS KXNITT UNDERWEAR, Shirt and Drawers, all sizes. collar to match, BOYS' JILIGEE SHIRTS, White, Cream, MEN'S Halifax Tweeds steds, beautifully thing nobhy for full' Three-piece style, Special hand tailored, all Sizes 12 to 14 Neat See Our Display of Boys' Hand Tailored Suits $1.50 $6.50 BIBBY"S Limited Men's and Boys' Departmental Store 78, 80, 82 PRINCESS STREET. HAT SAL Travellers Samples | Soft Felt Hats and Straws " Regular $2.00 and | $2.50 now TWO-PIECE OUTING SUITS, and BLUE SUITS, Blue, hand tailored, sizes 34 to 46 GREY SUITS. Plain and Faney English Worstedy ew Gordon special, MEN'S KARKI TROUSERS, $1.00, $1.25, $1.50, $1.75. MEN'S KARKI SHIRTS. SHIRTS $1.00 ms $19.00 $15.00 1818.00 Fan hg tailored. Wor- Some: English Indigo sizes 34 to 46 SOc, 75¢, 81.00, BOYS' SHIRT WAISTS, patterns, with separate to match SPECIAL, B50c. collar NEGLIGEE SHIRTS Soft Collar to Match Beauty for $1. 25. $10.00 -- GOOD ROADS AND PROGRESSIVE IMMIGRATION POLICY. Overbooming of the West and Op- position of the Lumbering In- Have Retarded Develop. ment of New Ontario 21 This Toronto, by from Rainy terests Toronto, there June arrived in train, delegations Kenora, Fort William, Port Arthur, Sault Ste. Marie, hessalon; Bruce Mines, Sudbury, and the Cobalt coun try. There were hundreds of delegates to take part in the New Ontario day programme. y At 9.30 a.m., the delegates, headed by W. H. Munro, Sault Ste. Marie. formed up on Bay street, alongside of the headquarters of the New Ontario day committee, and marched to the parliament buildings, where a confer ence wis held with the Ontario cabi- net about the needs of New Ontario, The four western districts of New On taro presented a petition; asking that two. million dollirs, of the five million dollar grant, be sperit fromi the Al goma boundary westwards. The speak ers from Port Arthur and eastwards urged that the great meeds of that portion of the province were good roads and a pregressive immigration poliey. : The Sault Marie delegation spoke of giving some form of assis tance to tha settler mind the fact that a great deal of good land was taken up by fake settlers and on the further fact that the lumber license unduly hampered the settlement of the great district of Algoma. i ) The Sudbury speakers referred to the needs of that grest district while a couple of speakers 'from North Bay spoke of the developmint of the silviy thatrict and the clay belt. At noon the Toronto Board of Trade dined the visitors in the arena. several hundred sitting down to' the tables, The object of the movement was to endeavor to give Toronto and Old Ontario a wew viewpoint with regard to the country worth of the French river, as to its climate and its agri eultural possibilities. New Ontario is Seven times as large as Old Omtario, morning special River, Ste, {and has severnl times a9 much arable land. Its climate, New Ontario people Girly. believe, is the country more pleasant than fact public have got a wron New Ontario bv the the st, and by. the t fumbering mterests to the it of New Ontario. This they account of the fact that the the means of starting which do damage to limits The at day it clear thy agency that has had anything to do with New in the past Yas given a wrong impression of that gol den land. that its winters are & impression over-boc the dry The ot ol ming opposition oppose settler fires on often 1s their timber spenkery Toronto to made almost every OUntario KAISER'S MUSTACHE. Higher Army Officers are ing Fierce Style. Berlin, June-21, Abandon- The kaiser's fierce looking, sharply 'upturned mustache js drooping. For he has set the style in Germany for the hirsute orna ment on the upper lip. The sharply turned perpendicular angle of the 'war lord's" mustache has for a de cade been the "military mustache," and the true sign of the Son of Mars When pefsons in civil life and the "@Dmmon people" began to sport this style, the army officers began 16 he gleet it: When the angle of the em peror's - mustache began to droop somewhat, army officers took the hint and gither cropped their - Wirsuitiesl nppendage or went farther, and imi tated the Ames ns by clean shaving. This bas spread so rapidly that now virtually the non-commissioned officers and the police are wearing the upturned mustache. Among the higher army officer there jis now a decided preference for thie Sean-shaves face and that promises to he the style of the German "Mars" for some time to come, : yvenrs only + A---- 1 FR STA dT Hav GOING TO BE COOL AS A CUCUMBER fore office The sight and fellows who had to the drop lato the leave an order for a new E48 service They are the ones who the hot, around, when roi anol stifling going and comfortable, and enjoy the many days are to be advantages derived by the use of gas for cooking CHEAP, OLEAN, CONVENIENT, A fice card addressed to the of of the Works, Queen Street 197, will information Light, Heat, Powe, Water, Depts C. C. FOLGER GENERAL MANAGER. re ---- i ---------------------- (Canada Life: Assurance The few have or 'phone the bring DECOsSary only anadian Company whose dq ibled i y wil} hrough profits res shape for Fig You cheerfully givew by J. O, Hutrox, Agent, 15 Market Street. Miss Mar McWait Judge M Wald, « LI61.000 in of Toroato "of leit Cook, daughter a, wa Mrs Sart will of. the a -- y of Coal hE ]%