ET. | oi Ld EN [1 Ee wn BE of J -weekiy by PUBLISHING STON, ONT. Piestdent Dally and IRITISH WHIG RUPERT DAVIES 243 | however, was the presentation of in- ol Department ....... : SUBSCRIPTION RATES: (Daily Edition) ie year, to United § . emesis A t-------------- OF-TOWN REPRESENTATIVES: 0 0 « W. Thompson, 100 King _ Street West, Toronto. TREAL--F, Calder, 22 St. John Street, Montreal. YORK ~Powers, Ine, venue, ham-Poweérs, Inc, 19 Street, to the Editor are published over the actual name of the eirenlation of The British Whig Heated by the Audit Bureau of tons. AN ALL ROUND MAN. Mr. John M. Campbell is an all nd man. mrtesy and geniality. Everybody knows him likes him for his muine business qualities, his gen- is help to all civic enterprises many sidedness. He belongs to organization worth while; he not hold a nominal relation- to them for he holds an office 'nearly all of them and takes a ly interest in their propagandas attempts to make civic progress many lines. In the Board of , on the marine committee, at General Hospital, board of gov- at the Mowat Sanitorium, | the Public Utilities Commission, the Kiwanis Club and other d bodies he is an indefatigable er. His judgment and his quick- in discovering and unravelling ms, make him a valuable man, Who has the confidence and Bem of his fellows. He is one of eity's foremost citizens, and all "know him without hesitation him as such. can lead a deputation, he can "its business before the govern- or the city council, or other in a suceinet way, and with 'good taste that he engenders ly relationships with those ; Le He fs clever, astute, good and generally 'brings ne the bacon." Mr. Campbell possesses all the lies requisite for a parliament- representative. He is broad- ready to advance Canada's from whatever source they 8, provided he realizes they 'real, helpful measures. He is to make experiments--his training has developed that leristic--to test out things, to 'matters even to the acid test, 'teach the proper conclusions. He n unfailing source of strength to and his election on Oct. would give him an opportunity his business gifts in a sphere. Help him by your 18 our advice to Kingstonians. will be no disappointment 'his election. He can deliver s in every instance. A SUMING UP. articles have appeared in 6 columns under the head of however, [to the girls especially for the lads 'over their ap- | Merce has ceased to exist, and the are mot so concerned over ap- Brantford Board of Trade 4s. he! unpropitious - for the assertion of drastic. retrenchment, there was an actual reduction in the public ex- penditure during the past four years of $114,000,000. The precise fig- ures were given to prove that com- mendable measure of economy. It was said that Mr. King and his associates had not exhibited good judgment in handling thé financing operations of the Dominion; but when the facts were fairly viewed it was seen that they had made an ex- ceptionally creditable showing. That showing was all 'the more creditable Although the conditions were most she could afford to dress them, be-y causé all' the children "there were from the same district, apd most of {them came from average { where' there was the same need for | the | When Collegiate | economy and simplicity. ; two older gitls went to | she found it necessary to dress them { better because the other girls going | { there from various sectibns of the | city were wearing better clothing { than her children had at public { school. This meant an added tax. on [the familly purse, because, as this | mother expreaeed it, "perhaps fool- {ishly, I want my girls to be dressed homes | He is alive with energy, | kad | Faved wht 8 when contrasted with the record of |as well as the rest." So she found the Meighen Government, which | herself drawn into a competition stood without parallel for lack of or-| that she' did not desire and which dinary prescience and for sheer she could not afford. waste. To issue twenty year bunds | The Galt Reporter in a recent is- At seven per cent., when five year | sue used a very apt phrase in de- bonds would have answered, will scribing what it considered the cost the country many millions in| proper outlook of those receiving unnecessary interest charges. | secondary education, when it urged The special feature of the series, | them "to remain simply boys and girls while they are in Collegiate disputable facts as to the industrial | classes." Teachers know very well progress of the Dominion. The fig- { what the problem is, but only to . a ures given in that regard were very i limited degree can they handle it. impressive, and left no room for | They can regulate the extent Conservative orators to claim an ur- | social activity centred in a school, gent need for protection. In particu- | and keep it within bounds so that it lar, the facts as to our export trade | docs. not obscure the more serious were both convineing and unanswer- | business of training students for able. We are constantly being ask- | their life's work. Parents can do even ed to witness the prosperity of the | more than teachers by wise counsel United States as demonstrating the | that will eliminate competition in effectiveness of protection; yet, when | dress and prevent any hurt to the a just comparison is made, it is feelings of those whose parents found that we produce and export | wisely recognize the necessity of nearly three times as much per|economy in the outlay of their capita as do our neighbors. What | children's school clothing, test could go deeper or be more con- clusive? --------i VACANT PULPITS. EDITORIAL NOTES. December 7th is the municipal election day. Canadian churches are from a lack of ministers. is such that the best charges are. i filled and the poorer places are The ball ---- ot tho ¥ | suffering. They need the ministry | © ballot Is secret; let the voters | to a greater extent than the popu- remember this. lous centres. But what can be done High protection means ! about it; ministers are human and food. Protect your table the call to a good church and a good : ! | salary is very attractive. The Can-{ | adian Baptist asks: Where are all | the men to come from to fill the | deaths in the ranks? Why is it that | men for the ministry are so hard to obtain? Is dt because of the bitter attacks made upon ministers, often- times by other ministers, which keep men out of the ministry? These are some of the questions which our church leaders 'have to consider. There is another side to the shortage. The prospects in old age are not promising. To this end Will H. Hayes is campaigning for a pen- sion fund for aged Presbyterian pastors in the United States. In Canada there are superannuation funds in some churches, but as a general rule they do not exist. School teachers and civil servants have the advantages in this respect. The Watertown, N.Y., Times makes a plea that is as applicable in Can- ada as in the United States. It says that there is a vital connection be- tween the pensioning of aged pastors and the present age of luxury in the United States. It is the fact that through the heroism and sacrifices of those true idealists, the priests and preachers from the early mis- sionaries to the old circuit riders and the modern pastors, the country has from the first been a land of be more prolonged than the election mighty ideals and clean lving, cap- able of intensive thinking on the | XICKIDE season. But both will have | problems of life and willing to work | M97 & post-mortem session. < i that ideals might be realised. "Glad to see that Bill Comstock is { Men such as those who now find | themselves without adequate means taking p_polities TT a | in their declining years, as a result PYOper type,' writes an _gld . Brock- of their lives of pure idealism and self-sacrifice, are among the pilots that have guided the thought of the United States, from earliest days to the present "in the paths of right- } eousness" and toward not only a | spiritual reward, but fits natural corollary, better material conditions of living. Mr. Hays is right in deseribing the present neglect of aged pastors suffering The pinch J>M. Campbell should be King- ston's choice. dearer People who are afraid of missing something, seldom make a hit. King is again to be charged with carrying on the government of Can- ada. What has become of Miss Phail? Probably knitting hard her constituency. in The girls will soon be taking oft their summer furs and putting on their winter ones. Players participating in the world's series will divide $339,644. 35, some of them with their wives. If the coal strike doesn't end soon about the only heat some get will be by singing ".the popular wartime song. f f Another bedtime story: "For heaven's sake when are you going to take these sheets off and get out the flannel blankets?" "The sole of your shoe denotes your character," says a colleges psychologist. Not so. Even the rich run down at the heels! The football kicking season is to "What has become of all the hair that used to adorn the pretty heads? Surely not all saved up in the fam- ily album, as the baby locks used to be in the good old days. Let the decision on Oct. 28th bo 80 strong for the King administra- i tion that a big working majority as "an economic and moral crime." will permit a wider type of unity to Now that attention has been directed prevail all over Canada. to the situation, there is good rea- - son to believe that a solution will Every one who has a heart rejoices be found for the problem of pensions | at the work of the Kiwanis and for pastors. Rotary Clubs in caring for the under- privileged and crippled children. They make good citizens for the care AN OFT-TOLD COMPLAINT. ; ¢ given them, ! Clothes, clothes are the concern of every woman. And it filters down to the children. Wh they wear to school? The mother's pride tends to the child's vanity and school garbs become a distraction and a source of envy to the little folks. This applies "How to Care for a Doorbell" is .& popular book. As for us we prefer a speaking tube. It saves time when the transients come around with goods to sell. ky . Brantford's Chamber of Com- sissy who does . gets doing business in the same old 'Way and at the popular fee of $10 Me- | ~~, A SUNDAY THOUGHT. Many can bring the Serip- tures to the mind, but the Lord alone can prepare the mind to receive the Seriptures. Our Lord Jesus differs from all other teachers; they reach the ear, but he instructs the heart; they deal with the outward let- ter, but he imparts an inward taste for the truth, by which Wwe perceive its savor and spirit. The most unlearned of men become ripe scholars in the school of grace when the Lord Jesus by His Holy Spirit un- folds the mysteries of the king- dom to them, and grants the divine anointing by which they are enabled to behold the invis- ible. Happy are we if we have had our understandings clear- ed and strengthened by the Master!--C. H. Spurgeon. FPEBLIP IEPA TIPE IIIT EDP +» od & PT EPPBC0 00095000 EBB P EL PIIP LCR P REPRO ED e dh when real race will around the oval. horses run of | Premier King invites all to _ get into the Liberal party. "If you have more yitality than we have, he says, "make that vitality felt in the party." Sound advice for Progressives and other groups. When the election is over King- ston has a fine programme of civie events to keep it busy. Board of Trade convention, opening of Ban | Righ, poultry fair and then the "municipal elections. And Christmas too is in the offing. | Every dog is entitled to one bite, | says a Windsor judge, but there | would be a terrible row if every man | were entitled to one punch at an- other before he could be called | guilty of assauit, is a Guelph Mercury | sally. --e-- - The District of Columbia is the most densely populated part of the | United States, 750 to the square | mile. "Rhode Island has 5686, { Massachusetts 500, New York 217. In California, the density is but 22, | Colorado 9, New Mexico and | Wyoming 2. The average density ot | the entire country is 36. | we { And now the candidates are be- | ing asked for a pledge that they will support the project for a Do- minion minister of health and the | development "of a carefully plan- | ned programme for the conservation {of the health and lives of Canadians." By the time all pledges are made, parliament will only be a rubber stamp. ; | Referring to the boast of Editor Thompson of Thorold that if he had a thousand girls, not one would | have bobbed hair, is a fair indica- tion, says the Toronto Telegram, | that his experience with the modern | girt has been very limited, or he | would know that this was a ques- | tion upon which father hag nothing | to say. } | LOOKING { AROUND decision of the Provincial Synod. to permit only episcopally ordained to pulpit, recalls {| The { Anglican | clergymen occupy, an Anglican He 18 of the that Presbyterian clergymen in past . R TyeRts™ Have preached --in--vartony | Anglican pulpits. In Toronto, Rev. { Dr. C. W. Gordon (Ralph Connor) preached in Canon Cody's church. In Kingston, Rev. Dr. R. .J.. Wilson preached in St. George's cathedral, {and Rev. Prof. J. F. McFadyen | preached in St. Paul's. Last spring, Rev. Dr. R. Bruce Taylor of Queen's { took part in an evening service in 8t. George's with Sir Gilbert Parker. Tomorrow is Hospital Sunday in the churches. The Kingston Gen- eral Hospital needs much money, now that it has become such a large institution. The additional cost of cleaning the floors of the new build- ! Ings will more than require the total j amount given in the city and county churches on Hospital Sunday. 3 Recent enactments draw more money than formerly from Fronte- nac county in the way of fines. Last year, over $3,300 was collected i through County Magistrate ' Brad- shaw's court. . ? It is really too bad that we can- not Bave a nice bright week-end October. - Here ¢ y rain are predicted 'there 1s 80 much to do on , of sport and been soaking it ta us. 'And the street railway /eq spas puts the chills into us by ann ing that it is overhauling hb Labor, this and n- e fleld| for winter Pham haat The New Hats $4.50 The Bat $45.00 | The New Hats $4.50 The New Hats $4.50 BIBBY'S DRESS WELL AND SUCCEED A Display of Choice Overcoats Well worth travelling miles to see. Real Masterpieces. Overcoat Day at Bibby's. Beautiful, All-Wool, English, Scotch and Irish--pure Wool Overcoating--superbly tailored, in the newest models and choicest colorings--truly wonderful values. The Morton $18.50}. The Marlow The York $25.00 $35.00 The Bengal $25.00 The Belmont, The Guard $25.00 $30.00 The W. dl . The Denbeigh, © $35.00 $30.00 The Kensington, | The Regent $30.00 $35.00 The Renfrew The Ritz $35.00 . $30.00 A FEW REAL ARISTOCRATS The Chic $45.00 The Bud The Pep $45.00 - $45.00 | COME IN IF ONLY FOR A LOOK: The New Hats BIBBY'S _ New The civic pile has been standing for | more than eighty years and origin- ally cost about $150,000. The strue- ture could not be built to-day for two million dollars. What was erect- ed over four score years ago is a credit to Kingston in 1925. According to Toronto university figures,it costs a girl about $600 less to take an arts course in Queen's, Kingston, than at the provincial uni- versity. This is quite a saving in- deed, and the student's life is more tpleasant in Kingston than in To- ronto. That jolly lot of young men and women who attended the sum- mer session just past thought so, and most of them are looking forward to next summer's session. Standardization of brains is dan- gerous, says Prof. Leacock of McGill, in referring to university teaching. Yes 'it is, and standardization of rugby-playing methods would also be unwise. So Queen's sticks to its own indf¥fdual rugby system, which the other universities "have been unable to imitate or counter. There ig noth- ing like individuality even in sports. The Watchman was hardly inclin- ed to believe it when one remarked the other day that the Americans did not know any more about Canada me In And try a hot cup of Ovaltine . The drink that builds Body, ®Brain and Nerves. Our demonstrator will with us for Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday and will be glad to serve you with this de- lightful health-giving beverage. DR. CHOWN'S DRUG STORE 185 PRINCESS STREET "PHONE 343. SAILINGS FROM MONTREAL Fo Liverpool Oet, 23|Nov. 20 Montelare NOWe@ svereriiernnness Montrose Moateslm To Belfast, Glasgow Oet. 22|Nov. 19 ....... Marburn To Cherbourg-Southampton- Antwerp. Oct. 21|Nov, 18 Nov. 4 ..Minnedosa Melita FROM QUEBEC To Liverpool Oct. 30|Nov, 25 ........Montnairn To Cherbourg-Southampton- Empress of France Apply to Local Agents J. E . PARKER General i, 'Passenger Dept. Shipment Just arrived. Get yours than they did ten years ago. Since yesterday, he thinks it may be right, for a Kingston man, just returned from the far west and who motored through Nebraska, was told by a nice -lady-of-a certain town that she had met the postmaster of Ontario and wanted to know if the Kingston man knew him. She was shocked when told that Ontario was twice the size of Nebraska, as she thought it was just a nice-sized town. Wit and Hamor " Reason To Pine. "My clinging vine, won't you let me be your oak?" "I like you, Oswald, but you ought to be more spruce." ---- t, The Cautious. NOTICE in a coal mine near Pendlebury England: "Visitors are requested not to fall down the pit, as there are workmen at the bottom." Educating Mother. . Mother---And what did you learn in school to-day, dear? C. P, R. Bullding, Toronto while they last. Adelaide 2105. Farms For Sale 1--Farm of 137 acrep near village of Sydenham, where there is a first class high school; splens dia stone dwelling with good cellar, furnace and cistern; fairly good out-buildings and plenty of them; about 65 acres of first class soil now under cultivation. There is abund- ance of wood and water. Make us an offer, / 3-76 meres near good village, good bulidings, in good repair, Jlenty of wood and water. ice $5,000. 3--40 acres, all tillable, of first c land, about 4 miles from the city, good buildings, weil watered. Price $4,250. Money to loan. Fire Insurance. T.J. Lockhart Real and Insurance Tp Ron, Op. Cor. Brock and Wellington Sts. Phones 770 and 23874-w, H. STONE, Manager. Clover (NEW) : In the comb ......25¢c. section In 6 1b. pails ......78¢. pail Jas. REDDEN & CO. When you buy Coal of kpown value-- \ ik KNOY. in advance-that it Iw re over night-- not clinker--/ a maxf- x