BRITISH WHIG. THE DAILY THE CURE OF CARE. | Boing until 1923, at least. By that A famous man of letters said to | time; Lloyd George will either have {Louis the Eleventh that he never had | re-established himself firmly in pub- THE BRITISH WHIG | rus cons or cane 88TH YEAR. | Walt Mason yet seen him without uneasiness and care, This sums up the situation for many; for care is a common plague, which furrows every face and for which there seems little remedy; 'and ! the question is, How to get something | to lift and sustain us in 'a world op- | pressed with care v To begin with, the care which has | grown into a disease was meant as 'a duty, Into daily life, we are en- | Joined to put heart and conscience |and foresight. Work is done {| without care fis scamp and | scamp work makes gcamp character, Lite, love, motherhood, and ali the | loyalties and disciplines of domestic . | happiness are made up of anxiety, Published Daily and Semi-Weekiy by | It were an ill day for the home it a THE BRITINA PANIED CD VISHING | mother's care and a father's 'Knxiety a | were to be surrendered, Again it Pres t Editor Sena | were equally fatal to the social order ag ng-Direet TELEPHONES: that work, J. G. Elltott Leman A, Guild .... 243 | tOWN Or nation caring only for what 2%} it men took their places fn church, | licjopinion, 'or there will be another ! | leader ready to take his place should | | he be defeated at the polls, | -------------- THE U.S. TARIFF WAR. As the new government of the i United States settles down to' busi- | | hess, it becomes more and more ap- | | Parent that its tariff policy is to be one of restriction of imports from Canada, The emergency tariff bill | made sweeping increases in the duties | | r products im- | a | 10 be imposed vn farm produ | those critters. The war is over, but] | ported into the country from Can- | ada. "From the decision of the Ways | { @nd Means Committee of the House | of Representatives, it would seem | very likely that the permanent tariff | olil wil} include tariffs of an eveit | this | | more drastic nature against | country, and there is every indication | of & tariff war, An interesting recommendation is that in regard to the duty on lum- THE POET PHILOSOPHER tiene WAR IS OVER. The war is over and I feel that all 4 the world should know it; for profi-| | teers still harshly steal the savings | from a poet rose in times of war and terror, when we were swatting brutal foes, con- | vincing them of error! As patriots | | We stood the gaff and took the dead- | ly bitters, thought prices would be | shorn in half when we had whipped | | 'the cost of many things is hooming, | timate consuming How easily the prices slid until they reached the] | ceiling, when Wilhelm waved his iron lid, and all the world was reeling; as easily they should come down, | since now the war is ended, and Wil- helm"s lost his valued crown, and had his bucksaw mended. I'm taxed | too much for this and that, for which | | and all our wages we exhaust in l=} 1 | How easily the prices | Business Office ........... Editorial Rooms .- Job Office SUBSCRIPTION RATES: (Daily Edition) year, delivered in city ..36.00 year, If paid in advance ... year, by mail to rural offices year, to United States (Semi-Weekiy idition) year, by mail, $asn $1.0 year, If not pald in advance $1.50 year, to United States $1.50 JT-OF-TOWN REPRESENTATIVES 0 Carder, 23 Si. John St. Montreal F. W, Thompson ......100 King St. W ey onto. «229 > One >... 135.00 $2.50 3.00 1.80 tor are published Letters to the Edi name of the only over the actual . Writer. Attached is one of the best Job printing offices in Canada. The circulation of THE BRITISH WHIG is authenticated by the ABC Audit Bureau of Circulations. 3 vphe season's bathing suits wil} reveal new lines." --Fashion note. It sounds impossible. ---------- It isn't difficult to like a man after | you discover that he thinks you a | 'world-beater, ------------ Disarmament has at least pro- | gredsed to the point where very few people say militaryism. | | ---------- | The radical's idea of a free country | is one in which the judge invites the prisoner to pronounce sentence, | oy | ---------- { Dr. Ruhland says jazz causes hy- | sterical frenzy. We always thought | hysterical frenzy caused the Jazz. Law making: 'You support my | bill and I'll support yours." There Is too much of this Aye for Aye stuff, -------------- It won't be normalcy until people talk less about international politics and more about neighborhood scan- dal, A critic says we have produced no great artists. Give us time, We are doing some excellent studies in still, lite, Se -------- An inferior race is always hated most by those members of a superior race who are not very sure of their superiority, ------ In Ireland they are kidnapping the magistrates, but in Ontario Attorney- General Raney prefers to decapitate them. ---------- A woman never makes a fool of a man. She merely tells him he is a Wonder and lets Nature take its course, A -------------- There will be everlasting peace when each nation adopts ag its slogan; "Any little country can lick us." ---- Some boys have a fair chance to amount to something, and Others know they will inherit the old man's money, {affected themselves and unconcerned {by any public danger. Such are mark- 'ed by other men's contempt. In- | deed we have had to learn these past | Years that if in national calamity | men will not care, they must be made | to care, | grows into a disease, Ruskin has advised that artists, If they are to do good work, must keep | | themselves quiet and peaceful, with {their eyes open, and live in the calm {of thelr own being, St. Peter gives | the same advice but supplies a dyna- | mie for its accomplishment. He says | the cure of care is to keep the j thought of God with us, He says each man counts as a separate per- son with God, that anxiety should not be an evil, it should be discipline | to bring us to God. | It would be a calamity to loge anxiety in any other way than by | | faith. But it is a great achievement to lose our care in the thought that we donot journey alone, that all the burden is not on our shoulders, that the future of wife and child, of busi- ness and fortune, of social progress and the redemption of the world, may be committed after we have done our best into hands that are stronger than ours and which are weaving the destiny of ourselves and the world. St. Peter's word is "Having once for all cast your anxious care on Him; since Iie cares not anxiously for you." ------ LLOYD GEORGE'S POSITION. The results of recent bye-elections in England cannot be very re-assur- ing to Lloyd George and his col- leagues of the government. Their Opponents have won a series of bye- elections and by such majorities as would indicate that, in' some parts of the country at least, there is in- creasing dissatisfaction with some of the phases of the domestic policy of the government, It seems almost as If the industrial unrest which has pervaded the country has spread into political circles, and as is usual when euch conditions arise, the result is unfavorable to the party in power. There are other bye-elections com- ing along in the near future and it seems a certainty that these will go against the coalition government. The almost inevitable reaction has set in, and although Lloyd George still has a substantia] majority in the House of Commons, he cannot 80 on indefinitely in the face of ad- verse public opinion. In various parts of the country there appears to | be a revival of the old type of Liber- alism which existed before the war, {and this has brought with it a cer- tain amount of antagonism to the Tory members of the government, and particularly to Austen Chamber- lain, the chancellor of the exche- quer, In addition to this, Lloyd George is faced with conditions at home which seem, almost impossible of satisfactory solution Wa realizes Example of a perfect will: "I give all that I have to my wife." This Is also an example mestic policy, -- | Some people are failures because they devote most of their energy to looking for chances to bring suit for damages, ------------ Some marriages turn out all right, and some young people settle down in the neighborhood ot bis people or her people, ----l The Pacific ocean comprises 36 Per cent. of tha earth's surface, and 76 per cent. of the argument against naval disarmament, 5 When a man says that a college education isn't. worth anything he is calling attention to thie fact that Be has become great without one, -- There are two kinds of parents: ~ Those who have sense enough to ~ raise children, and those who always * believe the neighbor's ilttle boy start- ed the fight. : Still, trying to maintain a greater navy than the neighbor's doesn't cost ~ th® world a great deal more than try- . Ing to dress daughter better than the neighbor's. ------------ Man is doomed to trouble. When he is poor he feels brow-beaten in the presence of his boss; and when Be Is rich he feels that way in the Presence of his butler. of a perfect do- | \ this, and, by appointing Lord Cur- { zon to handle the European affairs of Britain, he has left his hands en- tirely free to deal with domestic mat- {ters. He has a stupendous task om hand and should he succeed in mastering it he will have achieved another great personal triumph qulum to swing back in his favor, The most significant fact about thie whole situation, however, is that there secms to be no one in sight who would be a worthy successor to the great litle Welshman. Most of the recent bye-elections have been won | by independent candidates running, more or less, under the standard of Horatio Bottomley, who is a strong and fearless eritic of the government, But there is no party which has the slightest hope of defeating the gov- ernment to such an extent that it would be disiodged from power, i Asquith leads but a remnant of dis- | satisfied Liberals, Bottomley has a follow him, but for the most part there is weakness and division, Even his opponents see no hope of displac- ing' Lloyd George, nor is there any real desire on their part to do go. There is no other great leader in sight. There {is no man with $0 thorough a grasp of the world's pro- blems of to-day than he has, and as matters are to-day he is needed at the helm of affairs. So long ag he cares to hang on, he ean keep in Dower until the expiry of the legal term of government, which having been elected in 1918, can keep on And yet this laudable thing | | God's care for us is individual, that | | stitute a serious handicap to all farm | Canadian point of view, there. seem which will once again cause the pen. : : | and those and t'other, for catnip and | ber going from Canada to the Talted | for my sacred cat, and Stosies my | | States. Since 1907, all lumber be- | brother. The war is over, and from | ing exported to ths United States | oo t0 normalcy we're beating, but | | from Canada has beeil subject to a | Progress is so beastly slow we think | Canadian export duty of twenty-five | we are retreating. Progressive mer- | | per cent. The Ways and Méans Com- chants wisely strive to sell things | i mittee, in drawing up the permanent cheap and cheaper, but profiteers are | | tariff bill, has recommended the in- | Still alive, and make the prices steep- | ! clusion of an import duty equal to | er. | the amount of the export duty im- { | posed by Canada. A duty of one | i | dollar per thousand feet is also pro- NEWS OFF THE WIRES vided for spruce, fir and hemlock IN CONDENSED FORM | I logs. : | | dj | -- WALT MASON. {| The duty, of course, is intended to curtail the import of Canadian lum- | ber, and to develop the production | of the home article. This is, in it- | | | self, quite a commendable object, yet | Edmond Fortier, ex-M.P. for lot. | the tariff is meeting with strenuous | | Tidings From Places Far an Near Are Briefly Recounted. | biniere, is dead at Ste. Croix, aged | Opposition, In committee, it was | seventy-two years. | adopted only after a lengthy fight, | | and another bitter fight is expected when it comes before the house and the senate. Chief among the op- ponents of the tariff are the agricul- | tural interests and the Minnesota | oil : delegates. They want Canadian | The Roceina B., coastal freighter, ) {burned to the water's edge in tho lumber to come in free, as they de- {north-west arm, Halifax, Saturday. clare that the existing high prices | "Leopold Tardif was honorably ac- of lumber in the United States con- | Quitted of the charge of causing the death of Edmond Vezina in a Que- implements. Building interests, for |bec mill. | practically the same reasons, are | At Edmonton, Alta., Mrs, William | also raising serious opposition, As | Tood, Orillia, was elected president | Practically all the finished Tamber 0 the Federated Women's Institutes i | of Canada for the next two years. imported into the United States | The present petroleum and natural | comes from Canada, there would | gas regulations are proving most | seem to be justice in their objection. | satisfactory, according to officials | Looking at the matter from the |of the department of the, interior. | Albert Spratt, a lineman in the employ of the hydro-electric com- | mission, was electrocuted while | {working on a pole at St. Catharines. | Japan may take the initiative and propose a British-American-Japa- nese balance of power in armaments on the Pacific, it was stated in Tokio on good authority. Notification of the appointment of |F. A. Aclare, deputy minister of la- {bor, to be king's printer and con- troller of stationery, is contained in the Canada Gazette, Mr. Acland is la former newspaperman. The Anglo-Persian Oil Company [is to spend $6,250,000 mn develop- ing New Brunswick shales. Fredericton school teachers, | whose resignations wera accepted, {offer to compromise on salary, | | | to be advantages as well as disad- | vantages in the proposed new tariff. The lumber -industry would find its export field greatly curtailed by the imposition of an extra twenty-five ber cent, tariff, and that would par- tially deprive it of a very good mar- ket, On the other hand, the loss of this market would increase the sup- Ply of lumber available for the home market, and would, in the natural order of things, bring about a re- duction of prices. This in turn | Greece has declined the offer of would reduce building costs, and { France. Great Britain and Italy to would give an impetus to the building | mediate with the Turkish National- industry which has been sadly lack- [ists for the purpose of putting. an ing during the past few years, So (end to the hostilities between them that, after all, the United States Bly Srecks fu Asia Jeiwar, = ohn . ' } e Might be injuring themselves and best known lawyers im the United e"ping Canada by adopting the pro- States, died at Islip, L.I., Saturday, posed tariff schedule when it comes from kidney trouble following a before the House of Representatives | briet illness. He formerly was one early in July. tof the attorneys for Mrs. James A. " $ Stillman. | PUBLIC OPINION | New York, sustained a writ 'of ha- beas corpus issued out by Abe Attell, former pugilist, indicted fn Chicago in connection with the baseball . Joke in Toron'o, {Toronto Star) Ontario will be bone dry July 18th, it is said. At that rate, some To. scandal of 1919, Attell was Jis- charged. ronto cellars will be funny bones. -- The Enemy of Secret Diplomacy. (Brandon Sun) Have you ever thought of it? What the public don't know is only just what your newspaper doesn't print ---------- Unsavory., (Indianapolis Star) It they would cut the cables, Yap would .be a fine piace to which to banish the. principals and witnesses for the trial of some of those New York divorce cases. ------ It Is Mrs. Harding's Pick. (Cleveland Plain Dealer) It is estimated that President Har- ding has posed 500 times for photog- raphers since the inauguration. Among all those pictures it shouldn't be difficult for Mrs. Harding to find one good enough to be enlarged and hung in the best room. -------- How To Live Long. (New York Evening Post) sprinkling of Independents ready to; The best: risks, according to a representative of an important sure- ty company, are profane men, fat men, and, above all married men. A profane fat man who has just been convicted of bigamy ought not to have to give bond at all, What's in a Name? {Brantford Expositor) In these days of equal rights for wemen, exception being taken in some quarters to tNe time-honored custom which requites a married woman to assume name of her husband. The su tion is that the husband and wife might agree on what name they would assume, or that the woman might be permitted to retain her own name. In the lat- ter case 2 married fouple instead of registering at an hotel say as Mr. ard Mrs. John Smith, might regis-_ ter as "John Smith ang his wife, Maria Brown." What's ia a name, after ali? BIBBY'S "~ Men's Khaki Trousers $1.50 per pair Men's Trousers $4.00 per pair Men's Trousers Linen shade Special $3.50 qualities Our Price $4.00 Regular $4.50. Our Big Special $3.00 Cream Serge and neat stripes. Special --l Men's Bathing Suits $2 and $2.50 lines Our Special $1.50 Men's Bathing Suits Pure wool $6.50 Men's Straw Sailors The Store That Keeps The Prices Down Ou for $5, SUMMER SUITS -at extra special price, fine quality all wool Tweeds, ' Cheviots, Homespuns, pure In- i digo Blue Suits made to sell for $45.00 and $47.50; all hand-tail- ored garments. Qur big special at-- SUMMER SUITS Made to sell a $32.50 and $35.00. Le: See Our Men's and Young Men's Suits Sold - outs, cancels and samples, $25.00 and $27.50 varieties, Soe eisai, REAL PANAMAS Our big special $35.00 t » / r big special -- $25.00 cena... $18.00 $6 and $7 values. $2.75 McClary's Gas Ranges The finest finished Gas Ranges made in Canada. 7 different styles carried in stock to choose from. HOT PLATES--1, 2, 8, 4 Burners. BUNT'S HARDWARE BUSINESS than ever--that is how we find busi- ness--one year since we opened up don't weem that long, but then time files in a busy place. Make this your smoke shop. SPECIAL--GILLETTE RAZOR and THREE BLADIES $1.00, Jack F. Elde 269 PRINCESS STREET Opp. Davies' New Meat Store mn Why is it that all boy babies are "bouncing?" Don't girl babies ever bounce? i trades dispute. 417 PRINCESS STREET--0 PPOSITE ANDERSON BROS. Prices on contracting and all kinds of Jcb work furnished. all. Phone 878w. Give us a Farm (With For Sal A choice faim of 120 acres including crop about 11 r:iles from Kingston bordering on lead ug road first class rd ng. guod stone foundation Crop) e Cats and Dogs Now that the warm wea- ther is here, these pets re- quire extra care. We have a complete line of the famous-- DR. DANIEL'S ANIMAL REMEDIES for home treatment. their DOG and CAT SOAP Dr. Chown's Drug Store Rupture Specialist 185 Princess St. Phone 848. Also d4:coms; guod outbuildings; va ered; good drain- age; ¢ grain with pros- pects of a good crop; also about 60 «cres In meadow (also looking well), It is excellent land for hay or grain. Have had 75 tons of hay and 1400 busheis of grain In one season on this firm, besides pasturing 17 to 19 Cows, 4 horses and young cattle. This farm iy a mortgage lifter. Price farm and crop, $7500; wiikout crop $6500. This Is one of the many farms we Lave for sale. ! farm| 28 ns THOMAS COPLEY . Telephone 987. anything done In Estimates given rs and mew work: alse hard. "s of all kinds. All order: © Prompt attention. Shop Queen Street. earpen. all kinds Bn "nd T. J. Lockhart REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE Phone 322J or 1797J. N.B.---~We have removed our office to 58 Brock Street. Kingston GET IT REPAIRED Sewing Machines Fhonesraphs. Guus, Rifles repaired and re: Party supplied. Saws filed, Ratves, scissors and edge tools ground. Locks repaired. Keys fitted te all kinds of locks. All makes of Lawn Mowers sharpened and re« paired. We ean. repair anything that is repairable, ment of CROSSE & BLACKWELL'S GOODS HAS JUST ARRIVED --Mixed Pickles. ~=Chow Chow. =--White Onions. ~--Girkins. --Walnuts. --Marmalade in 1 glass and 4 Ib. tins. Jas. REDDEN & Co. Phone 20 and 990, The House of Satisfaction J. M. PATRICK 149 Syden Street, Kingston Phone 2056) FARMS FOR SALE 100 ACRES, 7 miles from Kingston-- rice $3950. only takes $500.00 cash to Randis Possession any time and own- or 1l give share of erop to have it harvest 'Will aiso sell stock and mi- plements at a low figure, as he Is re- ring. Plenty of others; all sizes and on easy terms of payments. One goou tWo-story cottage with gar- den. 'Wo miles out. 5 nearly passenger . Chevrolet - car, new, Piano, violin instruments; Engagements tor" soncern se 216 Frontenac Street. Phone 1325;, shop issue prevents a The open settlement of the Ottawa Sullding | -- --a | Coal That Suits The Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad's Celebrated | Scranton | The Standard Anthracite The oaly Coal handled by Crawford Phone 9. Foot of Queen St. "It's a black business, but we treat you white™ te a a anne