deney, Heart, Failing Memory. Price iar Ton 0 for $5. One will please, six will cure. Sold by druggists or mai in plain pkg on 1 weipt ire. New pamphlet me dled free. E EDICH CO. TORO 0. OF (Fuved A A ee A le McLaughlin Garage "7 34-38 Princess Street. First class work guaranteed. first class mechanics. and Accessories, Phone 1609. Ww. G. Robinson, Prop. | by Ofls CATARRH 4 OF THE TTR 24 Hours $ Each Cap- Sule boars (he name &3 Qo Beware gf counterfeits' whew p 4 p > CITY TAXISTAND 285 King Street. i Opposite Custom House Phone 749 Boat, Train and All City Calls Promptly Attended to. All modern five and seven passen- ger cars used, | then Laurier GLASCO'S Pure Scotch Marmalade and Jam. In glass and tina Baker's Fresh Grated Cocoanut with the milk, 15c per tin. D. COUPER Phone 76. 841-3 Princess St. Prompt Delivery. Branch months AgD bill boards the corner now occu- pied by Best's branch. To-day it is one of the most popular corners up town To the people made such a success of our new venture we wish to con- vey our sincere thanks We are striving each day to give the very best service ever, and it is most gratifying to us to have our efforts so ap preciated. Use us In every can We are here you. BEST'S UP TOWN BRANCH 2018. J. V. Bradshaw, Manager. - Six adorned who have way you to serve Phon a om ml J00k's Cotton Root Compound A dp N . io, $3: Ne 3 86 pbiy all nn eceph pamphlet. THE COUN ERIC TORONTO. ON2. -- Garage equipment and tools together with expert mechanics help auto owners to keep down repair bills. We have the best equipped garage between Toronto and Montreal and repair all makes of cars. We have the largest stock of automobile tires in the city. Our Prices are Right A call solicited. eo. Boyd, Proprietor Free Air. Dhone 201. > Done | Gasoline, © -- THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, _MONDAY, JULY, 1917. EE ---- og TAGE THREE ---- A a =r The Old Man' s Mind Saturday 4 is big en* Build dignity to w o~ oth- Surroundings neh air he 1 takes a throne® The OT1 Man me. 18 « heen Kig king the z in He Jus now but-a king just i ing audience 8 heated gr W nd gesticulated in e mem ms melt away at his call one they drift to the the Old Man wat. In feeling his usual method he makes up his consults his foilow- | It is this quality of intends to from makes him a great roon: | He is tham sts to say and at he which § { BLADDER 3 O!d Man has a crisis in his But that nothing new s had many crises on his hands in his forty years of public life, agd | learned what to do with Mostly what he does is to} and see A very little time may heal a very {reat trouble. The | 101d Man has long, wise thoughts about crisis. He sees far beyond the He knows that cries wax » and finally flatten out un are more like pancakes than | He knows that every rough three stages--the sup | purating, the acute, and the con- tvalescent Experience has taught | | him just when the inflammation goes ont of a crisis and when the change for the better begins He has never known a crisis to kill yet, and he feels that this one will not The Liberal party will come out of it well and strong. [If it doesn't 8 no doctor Most of those who consult the Old | Man are in the acute stage of crisis It will take some days for the Qld Man's calm words and serene ang to ake effect. As for the Old Man | the crisis has touched him not at all, save in an intellectual way The physician cannot afford to be sick. | It is his business to handle crises, | not to succumb to them. At every stage of the game the Old Man is the coolest person in all this fever ish Besides being too wise, too old, to feel -a crisis any than he does a problem in At the moment this sketch | is playing chess with the stately and deliberate he h them wait as ent ind til they war cries crisis goes th spot he is more Euclid. opens he crisis in a manner. What a gallant figure the Old Man is as he sits there! The white plume perhaps a little whiter than | it was twelve months ago, the cheek a ade less ruddy, the shoulders a little more stooped, the carriage less | resilisat, but a brave, blithe gentle- wan nevertheless. Eye bright, jaw set, chin up. A dauntless.captain the Old Man, with a hedrt for any fate. But an Old Man and, hayhap. | in a hurry Each hour is his en- emy Time, that patient soldier, marches against him. Let us get behind his forehead and see what is going on there. You must imagine that Sir Wilfrid is thinking aloud. « = 0» To be or not to be! Well, Borden is certainly giving me every chance not to be. I I went with him into | this coalition I wouldn't last a min- ute How can a man who doesn't want to conscript Quebec join hands with a mam who does? It won't] mix Pool our troubles? What a pool that would be! Thy Liberals to act as the ablutionary fluid to | wash the Borden Government's | guilty stains away! Of course the | immunity bath would include Bob | | Rogers. Some pool! Siloam had | { nothing on it! Coalition! What a sink-hole for myself --and Quebec--and the Libe- | ral party! Not one f us would | come through. Imagine Quebec with Laurier on the opposite side! {| Imagine Laurier with Quebec | against him! LET with Que- | bec lest worse-hatedf. I did pk | Oot | SS. SUMMER SCHOOL CLOSED |e MEETINGS is HAV E BEEN | MARKED WITH GREAT SUCCESS | Inspiring Addresses Given On Satur- day Evening--Students Held Clos 0 on the! | be conscripted by | fore a {on our free institutions. | seriptionist, | solid. | talk, no agitating. i chaff. | way. { Council to bring it into farce. | by Rev | go with Quebec, Quebec wil Bourassa At all costs we must prevent that I would keep Que- bev for Canada Bourassa would keep Quebec for Quebec. He would wreck my life-work Bourassa would bear Quebec away !a prize*for the Borden Government, as he tried to do ip 1%11 Yes, the | good angel and the bad angel are fighting for Qgebec. I am the good angel. Bourassa is the bad angel | To him I must yi a little I yielded on the bilingual question not much-- just enough to = Quebec-- just enough to inderstood by Ontario I must vield again. with the usual results I'll have to take my chances with Ontario anyway It never did like me. Calls me Frenchman and Ro- man Catholic! What I really am Is a Canadian, but they overlook that in Toronto The lion and the unicorn fighting for the crown. The British Crown, of course I take it that I'm the ton and Bourassa is the unicorn. Bourassa wants to set up an inde- pendent republic on the banks of the lLawrence--his grandfather Papineau's dream--but the British Crown is good enough for me. Que- bec, which {joves England with her head, believes that Canada should send no more soldiers to Europe than her heart prompts. When her heart ceases to throb woluntarily that is the time tp quit sending sol- If conscription is passed Que- bec will ohey the law--1 myself ad- vise it Meanwhile Quebec wants no conscription. Wher patriotism has recourse to a pulmotor like con- scription it shows that free will has been exhausted Canada, a nation. I musn't forget that. To keep Canada a nation I mustn't let Quebec slip. Quebeo must be solid for Laurier or the structure of Confederation is in danger. Bourassa would take it apart to see the wheels go round. A bad man is Bourassa! I must cir- cumvent all his ways. Quebec does not want conscription. To keep Quebec I must not want conscrip- tion either. And yet I must not cp- pose conscription. They would call the Frenchman disloyal. What is the way out? A referendum! That's the thing! It neither supports nor opposes, it only postpones As a champion of the poor people whose sons would this Borden Gov- ernment of sonless millionairey, I ask that the people he consulted /be- "rump' Parliament. oledted on other issues, and really dead for a year back. puts over this outrage A referen- Something I, as an anti-con- can move, and Frank as a conscriptionist, can se- That ought to he goed en- Besides it will keep Quebec It will dish Bourassa.. go with Pp be mis- St diers dum! Oliver, cond ough. Pid . Referendum! Moderate line of Let Bourassa rave on. Let Laurier be all dignity and composure. Good billiards Coalition! Poor stuff. I can see as far into a millstone as the next man. They don't call me Le Vieux Coq for nothing. I'm not to be caught with Conscription, what's there to it? The Tories are backing away from it. The farmers are against it, or- ganized labor is against it, and Que- bec is against it. It looks more like a frost every day. Borden tries to father compulsion, as written in the Militia Act, on Cartier and me. A raw joke! The Militia Act is for the defence of Canada, and my inter- pretation of the law is that Canada does not mean somewhere in France. Let Borden take care of his own war baby. Don't leave it on my door- step. It's a poor puling thing any- Any fellow that wants to fight it can find thwee places to knock it out It rests with the Governor-in- That probably means that if there is a successful 'etection between now and October the Borden Government "for | pose it can't be helped. will forget ter of facet, all about it. mat- conscription looks more e a promise than a threat. It won't hurt Quebec. But it does pinch her toes. That's what Bob Rogers intended it for. He wasn't thinking so much about winn ng thy war as winning an elee- tion. I have no doubt he is vastly pl eased to hear the gcreams of rage from Henri Bourassa, and the howls of anguish from Armand Levergne and of Tancred Marsil gnashing his teeth, and all the other cacophonous idiots perfoaming as per schedule. And I have no doubt the noise has been d noted in those parts of Canada where the English-speaking vote is thickest. .But I doubt if it sets Quebec against the rest of Can- ada, as was intended. That game 1s thin. Besides the people have not forgotten the war scandals, The old flag has covered a lot of looting here in Canada in the last three years. The food profiteers are with us always, and Sir Joseph Flavelle i$ a hard man to lose Poor Quebec! When will they stop pouring acid on the frog just to see it squirm? Yes, yes, the war must be won. But Quebec must be saved too. I am the man to save Quebec A bas Bourassa! - - * As a too + And it won't split the party eith- It's not a, party question. It's go- as-you-please. Besides, what's a difference of opinion mong friends anyway? It is concglvable that, there wid be a difference of opinion in the Censervative ranks also. Certainly the French Conser- vatives will not vote for "the bill. It's a saw-off. The western Liberals will go their own way. It is their right. They are not the inheritors of the old feuds of Quebec and On- tario. They are real Liberals, those western fellows, the natural result of the boundless, sturdy, deep-root- ed believers. A crisis doesn't sweep them off their feet. Was there ever a Gibraltar like Ned Macdonald? And Quebec---well, Quebec's Quebec and it's up to me and the Quebec Liberals to save the province from Bourassa It's only in Ontario that the Libe- rals are time and in captivity to the manufacturers. They have no fight in them. They're in the funk-holes most of the time. I don't mean the fourteen in the House. They'd he brave enough if their constituents would let them. I mean the Toron- to group of Lily Whites who would detach me from thé leadership to put Mr. Rowell in my place. Se- lective conscription, I understand, was their idea. They thought it would loosen my clutch and split the party. Well they guesNd wrong. I'm cock of the walk yet, and Leader Rowell and the -other sisters will have to wait their turn. It may be vears and it may be forever. I'm sorry to have two Christian Guardians instead of two Liberal newspapers in Toronto. but I sup- The best we can hope is that the let-us-pray crowd will be confined to Toronto for a long time. They. tell me they open the Toronto "Star' with prayer and close the Toronto "Globe" with the doxology. It sounds reasonable. Leader Rowell is not without political acumen, though possessed of a high falsetto voice. He d\s- covered, I understand, that the loud- est cheers were for conscription, of wealth and promptly shifted to that vantage ground. But George Gra- ham beat him to it. George had a conscription-of-wealth resolution on the order paper here days before Leader Rowell got fairly moving. Yes, we know a few politics down here. George Graham is a good prayer, even better than Leader Rowell, whose friends' figure that he has done so poorly in Ontario that he would do much better in a larger vineyard. A huge joke. Conscription of wealth! Humph! If anybody puts the rat in plutotrat we do. Save Quebec from Bourassa! Yes. But save Ottawa from Rowell, too. er special appeal for service being made | Mr. Clendinnen. Rev. J. D. Ellis, presided at the] meeting on Saturday night, whem | three splendid addresses were de-| livered. Rev. J. C the Pres Board and obgrtson, Secretary of | rian Sunday School | Young People's So-| a to a resume of the week's work, a| would take up his life's work as a missionary. He had pity for the heathen and heard God's call, al-' though a friend on learning that he was going to India said, "you are a fool to waste your time on the peo- | ple there." Rev. Mr. McCrae said he could not remember the time when he was not interested in missions. He also show- ing Meeting on Sunday Evening. .iaty took up a very important ques-| ed a spirit of adventure for going The annual session of the Kings-| | ton Co-operative Summer - School! | was brought 16 a ¢losé on Sunday! night, when a meeting was held for stude > only, the address of the | evenin, igg delivered by Rev. G. 8.! | Clendinne. he school has been a | Ereat success every standpoint, land the father it, Rev. E. R. Mc Lean, of Cooke's Church, is deserv- ing of much prdise for the result which has crowned his efforts, Mr. Meloan advocated the holding of a school here over a year ago, and kept| up the agitation until the necessary arrangements were made. Mr, Me- Lean had two able assistants with him, Rev. G. 8S. Clendinnen and Rev. T. De Courcy Rayner, and the three working together, prepared a pro- gramme that could not hae been, | improved on for the week's study.! | Able speakers had charge of the study classes, while the public ad- dresses, delivered at the evening sessions were most instructive. Sev. enty-five students were enrolled, and | this was indeed, a goodly number, in| view of the fact that this was the first session. It is hoped to double this number next summer, and pos sibly more than double it. The final session was given over og AAA CASTORIA For Infants and Children In Use ForOver30 Years Always bears the Signature of tion, that of "Religious Education, | Its Scope and Outlook," and gave' the students much food for thought in his remarks. He described educa- tion as the harmonious devolopment of our Jife, and religion our relation to God. In teaching we must give the children something to live their bost life now. The pupil must be given a clear idea of God. On Sun- days they must be given something to make them live better during the week. 2 "This is the job of the Sunday school teacher," added the speaker. "There is no greater opportunity in reach of any person to-day, than that which comes to the teacher of the Sunday school. Teach the chil- dren to know Jesus, Give them the best that you have. A tragedy in to foreign lands. "To live a life of service was his supreme idea, and the speaker appealed to his hearers to help along the lines of the world's greatest needs. The speaker said that a fellow stu- Went, after graduation told him that he was foolish to go to China. "That friend is now in ome of the best charges here in Canada." added the speaker, "but I would not change places with him." , This statement brought forth a hearty round of applause from the audience. During the evening Miss Olive Woodman two excellent solos, Miss Mary Shaw presiding at the piano. Canadian Casualties. Canada to-day, greater than any other is that there are so many fath-| ers and mothers who haven't any best to give to their children. The Sunday school teacher has the great opportunity of taking the place of the children the very hest of all--, the gospel of Jesus Christ." Honan, Chima, and Rev. Dr. Smith,' medical missionary in India, gave! brief but most Inspiring addresses on "How 1 Became a Foreign Missionary." Rov. Dr. Smith said he had no. brothers to play with when a lad, and consequently became "a great book worm," as he described him grims Davia Livingston's Life.and Explor- ations." As a boy, the speaker said be had made wp_bie Wind that hes Meme the mothers and fathers and giving, Rev. J. D. McRae, missionary in! Tae first book he read was Pil | second | Killed In action--H. L.. Stewart, | Miigbrook Wounded --W. J. Rupert, * ington: P. G. Bougard, Picton; New- oO. 8 mmons, Winchester; R. H, Mun- ro, Auburn; J. E. Harte, Brockville; W. L. Traverse, Napanee; J. J. { King, Trenton. Prisoner of war--F. Gilmour, St. Andrews. John G. Kent was appointed Hon- rary Manager of the Cammdian Na- al Exhibition, Toronto, and given 'a free hand. Premier, Holman, New South | Wales, hed a Darrow escape from | {death in a visit to the fromt i France. John Phelps, cdr Fepairef, was ine stantly killed while at work in the suid| tarde ot the C.P.R. at Seult Ste. + more than one Showers and local thunderstorms. Tomorrow at 9o muslins. mr OWANGING PATRIOTIC POEMS. Ome Effect of New Friendships Among Nations. War has had some odd effects on national poetry. Here in Canada we became so very humane in times of peace that we hesitated to sing the verse in-the national anthem about "frustrating the onavish tricks" of our enemies-. Now we shéiit _t quite lustily without a #ingle qualm. Re- cently we have heard that the Am- ericans may hange one verse fin "The Star-spangled Banner" so that it will not worry the British and Ca- nadians. Quite 'ately 6me Ameri- can suggested that the line in Long- fellow's poem 'Paul Revere's Ride," which reads, i£.the British march by land or by sea might be amended as follows: If the enemy march by land or by sea. It was considered that the alteration might please Canadians. However, it is not at all probable that many people in this country want the Am- ericans to mutilate their literature and repudiate their history becajse the nations have become friends. In fact if any Briton or Canadians hap- pens to be reading Longfellow's poem. he will doubtless be glad to think that these two Anglo-Saxon nations are not marching against one another. That would be our chief thought. We do not want Uncle Sam to give up his herai¢ literature In order to flatter us. The English, by the way, are not making any haste to amend. their own literature by cutting out of it the numerous hostile reférences to their present allies, the French. They have not cut this line out of Shakespeare's 'King Joha"-- Go I to make the Freach their arms They may even continue to sing, as in Palgrave's "Crecy," The legions of France are no more! Even so recent an English poet as Sir Henry Newbalt has seen fit to tell how The Frenchmen turned down the wind When Hawke came swooping from the West. Scott's heroic poetry is largely a rhythmic anathema of England, tell- ing as in "'Flodden" how the Eng- lish hosts," Their King. their Lords, fest low, They melted from the field as snow; but the English had their revenge In chant agaihst the Scotch, and the same songs are sung ay on both sides of the border. Do our expurgators fancy that in view of the joint operations of Rus- sians and Englishmen in this war, these two lines will be expunged from "The Charge of the Light Bri- gade" ?-- Right through the line they broke; Cossack and Russian Reeled from the sabre-stroke, Shattered and sundered 5 The -lierature of thelr wars against one another has trul: helped Britons, Frenchmen, and Russians to fight the more valiantly, perhaps the more harmoniously, side by side now. We have no doubt that the unexpurgated "Ride of Paul Revere" inspired many men to fight with the British now. lay down like a covey their might- More Russian Petrograd, July troops hate occupied the heights northwest of Presovce, on the Gali- clan front, the Village of Lavri- -kovee and Travotloki and the heights 'ed Dzvinateh and pressed back emy in the Jamuica Pasechna Wthwest of the Stamisiau re- \ so. 9.--Russfan | STORE CLOSES AT 5 O'CLOCK -- PLEASE SHOP EARLY ! Wash Goods Sale! 'clock we will offer a choice assortment of the season's most fashionable wash goods -- the materials are flowered and striped voiles, colored English dimities and novelty patterned The prices were formerly 25¢, 35c, 45¢, 50c, 60c and 75¢. Tuesday 19c¢ SEE WINDOW DISPLAY. ALL SALES FOR CASH. NO PHONE ORDERS ACCEPTED. a 20000 SUMMER "Furnishings Just received a large shipment of summer rugs. The famous De Luxe Rug, made by the Crex Carpet Company. Nothing better for bed- rooms and verandahs. Rockers, chairs and settees--a complete line. Edison Phonographs White Sewing Machines T. F. HARRISON COMPANY Phone 90. a -- TP [TTT SLR ' HOME PORTRAITS A SPECIALTY #85 per doztm. 11 in. 3 14 fn. line prints. For engagement apply by G. BLAKEMORE, KINGSTON. Coples of all my photos in Whig's iiustrated supplement supplement may be secar- he 7 California Fruit Store FRESH STRAWBERRIES EVERY DAY Oranges, 20c, 25¢, 30c, 40c and 350c. Bananas, 235¢ and 30c. Grape Fruit, 4 for 25c. All kinds home made candy, Fruits delivered to all parts of the city. Phone 2168. 286 Princess St. Charles Dafnas, Prop. New Bond List . nt of their July nds, our Dew contain PIA of a number t Municipal Boods from For those who are cons dering the inva mu dividends, be he incipal or other fu now for distribution, high-grade Camadian Government and which to make a selection, y éldng from 5% to 6.25% We wiil be ad 4 tw fufnish you nih a copy ot List upon request, Wood, od, Gundy & & Company New York Fred Seigal of Calgary, white driv ing » car in a race at the Fair, fatally Women of St. Mary's, Ont. have organized a Non-partisan Political Cl