PAGE SIX -- THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG et eee eves THE BRITISH : i 87th YEAR. - WHIG | counts are practically unlimited, do! { mot always advance p justice. The public is apt to r {them as about in the same category | las the bootleggers. i the « | IMPORTANCE OF SOUND TEETH. | | Belence has been late in coming to | | the discovery of the vital importance | of sound teeth to. the maintenance of | F | general bodily and mental health. * | { Thousands of sufferers from rheu-{ matism, infated, joints, heart trou-| ble, tonsilitis and chronic throat i trouble owe their sufferings to a dis~ i eased tooth. The disorder in the tooth is not always made evident 10} the patient by the pain that com- monly is associated with a toothache. In many instances a cavity, or even | AEN Ee |i : | causing any local hurt or serious dis- | comfort. But the poison emanating from the processes of decay in the teeth is absorbed throrghout the sys- ten. " By poisoning th blood, this de- oay causes bodily deterioration and consequent mental inefficiency, evem it it does not immediately produce specific diseases. OMe vear, deltverad in city ....36 06 | The todthbrush is one of the uni- Hae year, Jf paid 'in advapes 33.00 | versally recognized methods of pre- RY ined pural offices $2.00 | venting the decay of the teeth. The #7 (Bemli-Weekly Edition) gospel of the toothbrush is being Re yeas, by onl Hid insistently preached, not only by ev- i , cash x Ce year, If not aid iMadv 6 Cie. year, to United States 1.50 | ory dentist, but also by every phys- | lclan. {8x ana three months pro' rata. | dU T-OF -TOWN REPRESENTATIVES | : 4 'Calder, 22 St. John Bt, Montreal x . M. Thompson, 402 Lumsden Bldg. | POLITICS STILL TO THE FRONT. i Northry. a3 SIH Ave, Now York Mackenzie King, in his keynote Ie &0 | gpeech for the current session of par- the Montreal Star, ® | pipes the same old political tune; job | Dut the. people will not dance to it | any more, 3 by! Bbiisned Daily and Senl-Weckly bY BRE : ING TISH © WHIG PUBLIS CO. LIMITED 3 TELEPHONES: FMginess Office itorial Rooms ,.. p Office Y SUBSCRIPTION RATES (Daily Edition) em eee See ees -------- ---- [letters to the Editor are published | llament, says ops over the actual name of | ter. liAttached Is one of the inting offices in Capada. best an abscess, exists for months without | | (CanadaEast 'and | West Dominion Happenings of Other Days. Mackenzie on the Pacific. On the 20th of July, 1793, Alex- ander Mackenzie stood on the shore of the Pacific ocean. The tide was out when the explorér reached the edge of the ocean. Food supplies were almost exhausted, and every- body was glad to be at the end of the long trip, s¢ an Indian member of the party was sent in search of food. The next morning at "=x o'clock Mackenzie was anxious to proceed, but he had not gone far when he met three canoes, each with over '@ dozen men in it, who told him that recently the west had been attacked by Van- couver and his party---who had given his. name to the island of that name --and that a village had been ruined in. the fight. Seeing some ruins on the shore, Mackenzie landed to in- spect them, when he fougd he was followed by ten canoes, each with about ten armed men in them. Things became so threatening that the ex- plorer and his party took refuge on a safe rock, where they could easily defend themselves from attack. But although there was much insulting on the little party in the natural for- {tress. All night a fire was kept on the rock top, and a close guard was maintained, but nothing happened. | The next morning two Indian canoes | approached, and Mackenzie was able to secure a little meat from them. He ltighted a fire in their presence with tthe aid of a burning glass. This so amazed the braves that they at once {gave him the finest of their fox furs for the ¢oveted treasure. : | The party then prepared to quit the iplace, but before doing so Mackenzie {printed on the face of a rock, with {some grease: "Alexander Mackenzie, from Can- 4 Niagara language used, no assault was made | (The girculation of THE BRITISH |W HIG is authenticated by the yr > ABC i Audit Bureau of Circulations. | They know that when he finds. 4. by land; the twenty-sgeond | fault with what the government has | of July, one thousand, seven { done, without telling what he pro- | hundred and ninety-three." | poses to do, he is playing the old | . am rere game upon the old tactical lines; and IMPERIAL PRESS 'Friends and supporters of a free blic library now have the chance They y have dong waited for. ist not let the opportunity pass. from now on we'll let the sun do snow-shovelling.~~Brockville Re- For mpst households r-Times. they are tired of the olg game. CONFERENCE PLANS They know that when he demands | i an immediate general electibn he is Pletingulshed a hore wil making a very commonplace political | bluff; and they are fed up with that | July 25th. kind of politics. | Arrangements for the Imperial The average Capadian may not be | Press Conference which is to be held satisfied with the government, byt [ib 'Canada next SRMmSE TES rapidly tinquestionably he prefers it to any alternative possible at present, and wants tile government to hold on until he can see clearly 'what its dis- solution might mean. A Canadian election ordinarily is a son has been doing it right along. ------------ Chicago man told the police tha. girl had driven him to the altar at point of #=Fevolver. Isn't this pher exceeding the leap year privi- 'approaching completion. This confer- | ence which will be attended by one] hundred of the leading editors and | | publishers of the British Empire, in- cluding men like Lord Northcliffe, Lord Burnham, Lord Riddell and others of similar prominence, as well as publishers of Canada and some distinguished Americans, promises to { by the Geverament Railways and one iby the C.P.R., the party will leave Halifax, July 27th, making a trip | up to Annapolis and return on that | date and to Sydney on the {following day. On the 20th it is planned to visit Prince Edward Island, returning | to arrive at St. John, N.B., Aug. Oth. Leaving St, John next day | | with stops at Fredericton and Wood- | | stock, the party will arrive a |Q Sept, 1st, reaching Montreal {on the following evening. Sept. 3rd! land 4th will be spent 4n | atter which the party will proceed | {to Ottawa where the conference will | | be held Aug. 6th, 6th and 7th. * Leaving Ottawa the night of Aug. | | 7th, it is planned to spend Sunday at | | Falls and then to! Toronto, staying thére from Aug. th | i to the morning of Aug. 11th. ve {ing "Poronto the party will go | through Western Ontario to Windsor { where they will take the lake boat { of the Northern Navigation Company {to Port Arthur, arriving there Aug. | | 13th and at Winnipeg, Aug. 15th. | That day being Sunday will be spent | quietly, the official reception program {being held over till the following {dey. Om Aug. 17th Portage and { Brandon and Carbery will be visit ad. Regina will have its opportunity | to entertain the visitors Aug, 18th, | Calgary, Aug. 19th and 20th. | ~The following Saturday and Sun-| { day will be spent at Banff and Lake ' Louise. Monday, the 23rd, will be devoted to & trip up the Okanagan | Valley, arriving at Vancouver, Aug. 256h at 10 a.m., Wednesday. On the morning of the following Friday they will take .the day boat to Vietoria, spending there the 27th and 23th, re- turning to Vancouver without stop- {over on the 29th. There will be a | brief stop at Kamloops that day. The | next day will be spent at the New Na~ {tional Park at Jesper, the trains arriving in Edmonton on the 81st {and leaving on the morning of Sept. { 1st. After a short stop at Wainright ! Park, Saskatoon will be visited, On | the way back it is proposed to give {the delegates a day at Winnipeg, | Sept. 3rd, for rest and relaxation | after their train experience, without { any official program, : Leaving Winnipeg on thifiight of Sept. 3rd they will come via Cochrane and Iroquois Falls, with stops at | Timmins and Cobalt, arriving at To- ronto again on the morning of Sept. { 8th, for one day's visit at the great National Exhibition there, returning to Montreal on Sept. 9th and proceed- ing to Quebec that night. Here in the historic atmosphere of the Plains of Abraham the final sessions of the conference will be held. Extensive plans for the entertainment of the guests during their two or three days stay here are in prospect. It ds ex- pected that the party will sail for home again via C.P.R. Mines between Sept. 12th and 16th. The arrangements for the confer- ence and its trip are in the hands of C. F. Crandall of the Montreal Star, ENESENEENEENEEENN BIBBY"S Brand Clothes Are Sold. or For Young Men and Men Who Stay Young -- Where Society I " See the Raverhall Suits New chalk line effects $52.50 and $62.50. See the Dorsay Suits New Virgin Tweeds © $45.00. 'OTHER MAKES: --The Clinton Suit, $35.00. ~The Berkley, $37.50. SOCIETY BRAND * EXPERT TAILORING New Spring Suits It's the tailoring that makes the difference in clothes, the same material is available to every clothes maker, but the style may be tailored in, as Society Brand tailors in the style, or it may be pressed in, to disappear in the wear of a short time. kind. : = We have to ask you more money for Society Brand Cléthes--a little more than you'd pay for clothes of the ordinary ¥ ' + Tege? - Nereus President Wilson 'has taken his typewriter in hand and is preparing. plain choice between two parties with more 'or less definite' policies. An | 'slection to-day would be a plunge in | the dark with possibilities perilous to | who is acting as honorary secretary of the Canadian Press executive which is issuing the invitations. be the greatest event if its kind in the history of the British Empire. The meetings of 'the conference it- self will be held at Ottawa; and will Society Brand Clothes will prove the best cloths' invest- ment you can make, because their style is different, and their another note on the Adriatic ques- fon. Woodrow is himself again, it would seem. ia ) s pot only the prosperity of the Do- minion but to its federal ,existence. ---------------- THE RICHARDSON MEMORIAL The eity council has done well in} adopting daylight sawing again this ~ ssmmer. It may have itp drawbacks for the farmers, but. fop the city workers it is a blessed boon, Yo S . The announcement that - James Richardeon has 'undertaken to build an athletic stadium for Queen's as a = memorial to his late gallant brother, rns mee George T. Richardson, i ©. A now Liberal daly newspaper s ie ave 2eg most pleasing surprises we have had A be started at. Ottawa, 'Will the for some time. The generosity of managers please tell the rest of 88 ithis family' in promoting varios where they get their newsprint? Toe schemes of benefit to Kingston has "query is not prompted by curiosity. |aIways been striking, and this latest gift 4s only ose of many. The ath- letic committee of the university is indeed fortunate In hawing secured the interest of the donor in so tan- gible a manner, and the sporting activities of Queen's will be placed i on a level with those of Toronto and McGill by the gift, " As a memorial to a very gallant officer and gentleman, there could be nothing more fitting than a gifl of this kind. George Richardson, during his brief spell on this earth, proved himself to be a sportsman and athlete of the very highest type. He not only took & great interest in all matters of Sport, but he was an athlete of a very high order. Ip many 'branches of athletics he was ---------------- The city made nd mistake in elect. ing a number of young men to the gouncil, They have already proved their worth. The pity is that some of the deadwood was not removed Tong age" ---------- The day when a farmer's daughter ' gould teach school on a "permit" is gone forever. Teaching is now a skilled service, and as such must be adequately paid for. And the better | the paf, the better the service: I have never been able to entire- ly vid myself of the belief that any mations which douid not settle difter- . gnoes withopt the sword are not . worthy of fsing called Christian ne- " -- Ex-President Taft, at extend over three days, but before and after that event it is planned to take these distinguished journalists on one of the most extensive tours of Canade that visitors have ever had opportunity to make. As at present arranged the visitors will arrive in Halifax, 'July 25th, where they will be royally welcomed by representatives from the press of Canada, the Governor-General, the Dominion Government and the Nova Scotia Government, On two special trains, one supplied Monday evening a well known re- sident of Prescott died after an ex- tended ; illness in Mrs. Bdward Quinn. - PS SAINANNAP IAN TINI NEPA, PILESES he al moe or Edmanson, Bates & Co. ; Limited, Kipling Rhymes AUTHORS' ART. wearing quality represents the tra-smart Suits naturally are to ers," where the premier models tailors, are found-as well as the dashery. * ~ mA EAA E EES NERN AREER ERNE ARRAN 8 | = E WE BBLL wes wisest kind of economy---ul- be found at "style headquart- are designed by Society Brand latest and best things in haber-. YOUTHS' FIRST LONG PANT SUITS Real clever models--$25.00, $28.00, $32.50 and $40.00. prominent, his best work, perhaps) A lot of authors kill our laughs, and bore all gentle readers, by finishing their paragraphs with | foolish strings of leaders It's spoiled a lot. of books for me, this silly affectation, and when a "leadered" page I see I'm filled with indignation. r: . CT iiv...They say the Walpole books are great, they boost his "Secret City;"" but me they chate and irritate, inspiring this punk ditty... ..... aes His sentences all disappear in leaders running tandem; and it I had some stale eggs near, to Walpole I would hand em.... shes ana d0'OP I never am | enthused, however apt their phrases, if in them fly- speck lines are used, when words are cheap as blazes i ssssinsrssssvsd do not think the writer fine (I to make confession), who has to use a dotted ems of writing hicks oft make me shrink and shiver; no author n resprt to tricks, whe can the line to help out an imp Masses nnnssnmssesThe ll stfatag [Pr -- "BUCKEYE THREE SIZES: --80 eEEs, Guaranteed to Hatch More INCUBATORS" 120 eg Bs, 220 eggs. Chic ks, Bigger Chicks. Lake Ontario Trout tock, Ont. being on the ice as a hockey player, He himself could wish for no finer tribute to his m ry than,to have | s a place bearing his name set aside ji as a gathering place of the_ finest } athletes of Canada's leading univer- sities. J The thanks+of Queen's University and of the whole eity of Kingston are dus to the citizen who has made WE MANUFACTURE t= x this splendid gift to his Alma Mater, ||| HUNGARIAN PATENT AND WHITE ROSE FLOUR, BUCK- and be fully deserves the honor con- |} » SRANULA GORN NEAL (SROURD | ferred on him by being elected anit 1 mls TIE Domed Sait] BRAN, SHORTS, FRED, FLOUR. ENNRAEAEENEEERER body. Queen's has ever been fortune |§ i 3 7 : Photographs weer maou ate in the loyalty of ua Photographs of the Children . : and fo-day she has once Snore cause |i to be thankful for the interest takeu in her welfare by those who have : i passed 'hrough her gates as stu. goods deliver... ....cosrvsnvesva : Whitefish, Fresh "UNALT MASON. || Sea h, Pres. Sea Salmon, dock, Halibut and Cod. . DOMNION Fish C0, es - n rp bine enty thousand Armenians are 4 dered in ohe province by tae rks. The United States Senate re- to fatity tha peace treaty, What be the world's verdict on the ae- of this great nation in the face such facts? Admiral Sims, Mke Admiral Dewey, has become bne of the best sed men in the United States. did their duty as they saw It. and both deserve praise rather than gepsure. History will accord each ot them their rightful place in the na- 's role of heroes. KINGSTON MILLING COMPANY, Lid. _ Foot of Brock Street, Kingston Our mill is equipped with modern machinery, driven by electric motors with current generated at Kingston Mills, and Gas Work a speciale Suarantecd. ty. All work 5 - DELAWARR We have private fitting room and ex~ : DRA ANNA perienced men and women fitters. ST 'A newspaper publisher spends 3 v of The Standard Anthracite. Crawford