PAGE FOUR. ~~ 3 THE DAILY BRITISH we. WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 18, 1911. --ce-- OUR SPECIALTY BEST QUALITY, BE3T MAKES, LATEST and most --improved. PRICES LOWEST. Satisfaction or money refunded. Corbett's. 10 Per Cent. off Hock- ey Skates and Sticks COC Sage from New Year's day for the Sunday candidly confessed Boat Lumber Boat Timber ---------- eee We make 2 Specialty off SHIP PLANK, DECKING AND TIMBER For Shipbuilding. 23. ANGLIN & CO. WELLINGTON ST. NORTH. 'Phone 66, --- NOW Is the time to come and buy our ods For two good reasons-- he rush is over and money is Scarce, Weer 20 per cent. off all purchases over ten dollars. aw line of Heaters and ranges yet to clear out, Our stock of beautiful Old- fashioned Furniture is the best in the Soumtry, and as we hive too much on hand will sell very oap. Al kinds of Household Goods and Bric-a-Urac bought and sold, L. LESSES, Cor Princess and Chatham Sis, 0000000000000 00000000 * ° » * » - * * » * ° Ld * * » . . . . . * ® * : ING'S CAFE ING'S Lunch Counter ING'S Private Dining Rooms ING (James) Prop. ING ST. Nos. 338-342 (NGSTON. Now open. Catering Contracts Taken. Telephone No. 1138. If we please you, tell others. If we don't please you, please tell us. KING'S Full Course DINNERS Cannot be excelled in Kingston, Toronto or Mon- i Jou and yours won't look such chilly -- frostbitten -- red Bove crowd if you use THE WHIG, 78th YEAR 30a 310 King Street, Kingston, Ontario, | t $8 Fe year. Editions at 3.30 i Bil WEEKLY BRITISH WHIG, 18 pag ublished In . on Monday an ones ten, cha A ET had | e best "Fob Print- | k; nine improved presses. "The Bish Whig Pblking Co, Li, TORONTO OFFICE. Sulte 19 and 20 Queen City Cham- bers, 32 Church + Toronto, H. E | Bealipeicr, J.P, representative. " i Daily Wing. TROUBLES IN THE WAY. The agitation for & change in the election is not con- The wubiect is dis- The Journal, of Ottawa, favours a nomin- | ation of candidates sbout the middle of January, and an election about the | end of the month. In Toronto the i | nomination. is further from voting day | than in most places, because the has had fhecial legislation on the sub- | but does not want date of the civie fined to Kingston. cussed in Ottawa and Brantford.' city | ject, Toronto a the school houses and the build- are available during the holidays Expositor, supports an amendment to the because it does not see balloting. It uses Hor polling purposes, ings of Brantford, | gene! any only. The ral law necessity for varied appointments or » i : varied amendment, when public opin. ion so unammously demands a relief from electioneering during the Christ: mas season. There is an objection to an élection at the end of January: The until the financial vear could not be closed and period which does and 'the calendar year is bound new council took office, any not begin end with to entail awkward situations. OF SAFETY. Toronto, in GUARANTEE Col. tencing Mr. Denison, of sen- Travers to six years' im- prisonment, in. the Kingston pentiteny for: crimes which he' admitted, ia ne There is one thing that can be said for you, tiary, reported to have remarked : however, and that is that you have been, to a certain the victim of a banking system with no outside inspection, a system which allows the head office to go on without any in- spection, or at least with only inspec- extent, A government of no use. tion would have prevented you from @ being in the present troubleSome posi- penses MH this deficit tion." i There is a manifest weakness in this statement. _A government inspection means what? An , and so extensive and expensive that it could not be contemplated. And were it a possibility the fact remains that a government inspection, - like a bank inspection, might fail since it could elaborate system, not reveal all the circumbtances of. the case, One check, sugfested, and by a banker, It is that the vice-president of every bank be a state appointed official, a banker, and in touch with the business, the man who would be required to sign the monthly statement of the inatitu- tion's assets and liabilities. This offi- cial should be paid by the and gladly so, since his independence would be the best guarantee that stockholders depositors . could have of the honesty of every transac- company, and tion. --One-bank did actually consider this proposition, on ite merits, and apart from every contingency of a suggestive character. to 'effect is perhaps regretted, as it | have been a bank's friends and' perhaps the ernment might now approve. ». HE DEFIES THE PEOPLE. The Marquis of Fontenoy rises at once, and by a single act, into fame. He is a man with an idea, and as a representative of. the House. of Lords, .and not often heard of, this is a matter of the greatest importance. The noble marquise has discovered--or some one with a greater desire for work then he possesses, has discovered it for hig that in 1856 the govern- the govs would departure § for; life, and the upper chamber refused to DAILY BRITISH WHIG, published at and 4 Canada; rapid, styll ah, { } sure and certain, has been That it was not carried in i that a nation shall 'be loaded up, Britain is now, with many Segislniive incapables, and that nothing a king . or cabinet may do will rectify wrong. The unionist parly gasped wn it an, assurance that as the people in an elect jon voted he would act. Such. | hing was interpreted upon royalty, as an aitempt to } volys his majesty in the quarrels ihe day. What can bg said of the { Pontenoy challenge ? Does it not re- } flect upon the judgment of the king ? | Must he be warned to keep hapds i in- the AGAINST NEW YO a 3 as a reflection | of Pres CHARGE OF HERESY | TERIAN MINISTER. BF Dries ot Pot Dally 5) was said the King would ba aeked for Despite the Opposition, Rev. N. M, Appointed an As- New : Thomas Was sistant Pastor tery. New York, Jan. 183.---The jtery, at a special meeting; terday, g the Rev. Norman-M. duate of the Union inary, despite a strong Thomas, 1 heological Sem minority off position which charged nen-orthodoxy. | the precions second chamber and per- The Rev. Mr. Thomas will now become ! petuate its deficiencies to the end of i} | time * One wonders what my lord Lans- downe thinks of this performance. He | dai ined on has not presumed to fly in the face of | based on the same public opinion, and to warn the king laid against the admission some to beware of the peers. Only , the noble marquis, distinguished in a day, dare notify the nation that the peers are the superior of the king and coun- the try. EDITORIAL NOTES, The laymen talk of regenerating the world in a genwration. world would not be reclaimed until the crack of doom not become mightily active. if the church did i + The evidence that now appears gives some idea of the full fish which Dr: Beattie Nesbitt was always able to show. Now we can understand how he regarded with contempt a government office that netted him $9,000 a year. parliament, what Mr. Foster charged when his party bécame ulled up in the eight-hour hill, was wanted to compare Playing is notes, the chance The grouchers the trimming they desefved. premier eventually gaye Three hundred men, on Sunday after- Toroyo, decided, on the in- of So that the machinery which noon, in to lead a vitation . Chapman, new life. Rav, Dr. precate, seems to be producing the de- sired results. Benson amd some others de- (lol. Munro, the president of the Far- mers' bank, signed the statements that were laid before him. He was assured that were correct. What more could any president or director, not in the bank, and not employed upon its books, know ¥ they ® tion from within the bank, which is | inspection | ® would have put a check on this thing the United States House of Represen- @ long before. A careful outside inspec- tatives, will face a deficit of $30,000, The democrats, in the majority in cut down ex- not reach that to does £100,000,000. Herein is a legacy no politigal party can desire. 000, and will have The French colleges and clergy have taken up the national vpuse, it is al- leged, and will push it for all they are worth. If it is to become a ques- tion -of French English, and the church stakes its future upon the is- something regrettable may hap- XR Mr. Bourassa has had a secret meet- img with Monk, Lavergme and Prevost in Quebec, and for the purpose of ap- praising the political situation. While Bourassa was absent in Rome, seeking the consolation of the church, the na- tionalist cause went to smash. Some- thing was to blame. What? vs. sue, pea. | The Montreal Herald does not seem to think that it was necessary for the manufacturers to protest against reci- procity. Why not! Should all classes of the gubject ust be heard ? Granted that Messrs Fielding and Patersom are safe men. They-should Fnow what the captains of industry have to say. TIME FOR MEALS. Court Decides in Favor of Worker Whe Stopped to Eat. Montreal, Jan. 18.--Reasonable time | for meals must be allowed workers in ; accordance with the judgment rendered by Justice Davidson, in'the case of Beaudoin vs. Bernier and Brunelle. Beaudoin, who was engaged to deliver ice, claimed he had worked from 4 a.m. to 9:30 am, without anything | 10 eat, and that when he refused to] continue delivering ice on an empiy stomach, he was discharged for insa- bordination. He thereupon took act- jon against Bernier and Brunelle for breach of contract. Upholding his contention, the judge allowed Beau- doin $43 costs as remuneration for the money he had lost while look- ing for another position, NEW C.P.R. R- STOUR ISSUE. i Montreal, Jan. 18.--~The belief is growing here that the C.P.R. will id sue twenty million of new stock in the with it the hereditary privilege, or near future. The capital now 'is $180. right of conveying his honors und 000,000, and the authorised capital is two hundred million! x "| he and a ot i burch, A preacher on | practice. of the Brick! from tue pastor- | Henry Van will be hn assistant. pastor in this city, ate of which the Rev. Dyke recently Fetired. He Jan. 25th. The opposition to Mr. that time ago of the Rev, Messns. Steen, Black and Fitch also Union Theological Sem- inary graduates, and it is said that several of the ministers, who led in former protest were also the rime movers against Mr. Thomas. fiime the basis for the protest was {that Mr. Thomas did not accept the authority of the Holy Seripture as the only infallible rulé-ofifaith and This, it was charged, "ap- ground as that the | peared in bis repeated refusal to ai- {firm nis faith in the virgin birth of Christ, the raising of Lazarus from the dead, and the raising of Christ's body from the grave," GOES TO BROCKVILLE. Reginald Crawford Has Been Sent Eastward, REGINALD CRAWL. Reginald Crawford, teller in the Northern Crown bank, has heen frans- forréd to Brockville, and will leave on Thursday for his new post. He is a son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Crawford, Bakrie street, and 4 voung man of first quality. fe has been with the bank in this' city since its inception and made good in every position. /'Reg" is a popular young man, a fine athlete and one of the members of the champion Frontenac . hockey team, He was also 4 fielder on the champion Victoria baseball Quite, genial and willing his removal will he a source of rétret ty his num- | erous friends. GRAND STRUNK CONTROLS, And Will Rush the' "Ottawa-Brock: | ih perk ville Line. ! Jan 18 railroad "The Grand a controlling Ottawa, Trunk owns part of the stock of the Rideau Valley ! and it is | and Brockville railroad now altogether likely that line will finally become a branch of the G.T. B® This announcement is made by . D. H. Maclean, vice-president of the com- pany that proposes to build between here and Brockville. 1 "The plans of the line are ready" continued Mr, Maclean, "and it is probable that the construction will be | begun early next summer. It is to be inlerred from what I have heard . from the G.T.R. that they intend to build the line and intend to rus +h it through | as #oon as possible.' Fhe --Ridean-- Vater --&-- Frock vite railroad was launched about eo rht months ago by Ottawy ¢ apitalists, in Suding F. A. Heney and Darrister D . Maclean. : START "DRY"™ CAMPAIGN. i Reformer Declares Saloons are In. dustry's Greatest Foe Chicago, Jan. 18.---A vigorous anti- saloon campaign has heen opened here with the object of making prohibition an issue in the coming municipal elec- tions. "The liquor saloon is the most gig- antic industrial foe ihe country has," one agitator deplares, "It employs the least amount of labor for the money ihvested of any class of busi- ness. The saloon business makes the smallest returns to the producer and the man who labors. Suppose I spend $10 in the city saloons, let - us see where, it goes. NH it is spent drink, just thirtgeight cents will get back into' the bands of the producer | and ninety-six cents will fall into the hands of labor. The balance, $5.66, foes into the expenses and the profit of the dramshop owner." PARALYTIC LEAS TO DEATH. Jumps From Eighth Stofy of Hotel J and Instaiely Killed. St Louis, Jif. 18.~Henry Whit- move, aged sixty-eight, former assis- the I tant secretary of the St. Louis Mer. | terday. chants' Exchange, leaped from the eighth floor of the Marquette hotel to the Washington avenue pavement, yes Death was instantaneous. He left a note in his room in hotel, saying: "The doctor sav I will be utterly helpless and bedridden the rest of my life. I per des, charitable in vour YORK PRESBY-| | York Presby-| New York | yes- | ranted 'a license to preach to: a gra- : op- | or- Thomas was | | side {but on a team. | this means quite an item to the | Washington, Lin the supreme court of the district of twill of J | valued 'at $250,000 | Melt and the property involved or | | amount ' DR. SOPER i { | : Specialists in diseases of Ski Blood, Nerves, Bladder aul Special ALN i] meats of men. i Ome visit advisable ; If Impossible, send history for free 'opinton and ad- L¥ vice: Question blank and dook on Siseares of men free. Consultation | free. Medicine furnished in tablet form. Hours : 10 sam to 1 pm. and 2 to 6 p.m. Sundays, 10 am. to 1 pw. » DRS.SOPER & WHITE 25 Torunto Street, Toronts, Ont, SCIENCE OF CHEESEMAKING. A Maker Nowadays Has to Know ~~ His Business. A branch of agriculture which in. the oar t few years has passed from a { trade to a science and the inner work- | ings of which few people really under- stand is cheese-making, which is be coming more difficult each year. Of the thousands of people who each day buy and eat cheese, there are very few Who really know the experience requir- to turn out the finished article. few vears ago an apprentice, by ko in two summers in a cheese factory, would be turned out at the end of the second season a\finished .maker. Now, as in other trades and professions, which are making rapid strides as the world marches on, this one is requiring trained and skilled men. To be a finished tradesman, must Nat in two or three summers in the fachory and put in the winters in 1a hn hool learning' the technical as well as: the practical. The rea ! son given by experts for the need of better men is that the standard of the finished product is being raised each year to such an extent that men re quire more learning now than in days ec one gone by. One thing which may not be general- bv known is the fact that the cheese maker in charge of a factory ia held responsible for every pound of cheese made from spring to fall. When he signs the contract in the spring for the he guarantees to turn ont a first-class article. If .the cheese falls short of the standard the cheesemaker must dip down into his pocket make good the difference. Those who act a= judges of the cheese are the buyers. These men go to the board every Thursday and purchase cheese from certain factories at the market price. When the cheese are delivered gt the station or boat the buyer there with his tryer, He plugs three or four of the load or shipment; and [if three out of the four of the ones tried ,are off color, off flaver or have any other fault, the balance of the load is averaged according to those tried. The "cut" may not amount fo more than a quarter of a cent a pound shipment of 5,000 pounds, one This has unfair me seems to season, and who has lo make it good. long been recognized az an thod, but nothing better have been arrived at During the hot summer months there great deal of milk which comes in aps 'a bad flavor. The flavor be detected at the time, but itself during the process of converting it from milk into curd. The result is when it gets in the curd it still stays in the cheese. Many cheesemakers regard the pre- sent system of buying and "cutting" | graft and not long ago a retired cheesemaker overheard a salesman for | a cheese factory and avreeing to. divide the they would squeeze out cheesemaker. is a may noi { will manifest as a profit which CANADIAN HEIRS SUE To Break the Will of a Washington Resident. Jan. 18.--Suit was filed Columbia, yesterday, contesting the nes H. McGill, of this city, which devised Washington real estate to the town of Bowmanville, fat. Canadian heirs began action against the town on the ground that the laws of the United States Wore violated b the bequest and also that the legisla ioe charter creating Rowmanville did OL permit the municipal corporation to become eountny, The Plaintiffs are John and a landowner in a foreign Isobel is the McGill building in this city. Me Gill died in 1908, his will providing ythat on the death of his wife the Canadian town became residuary lega tee of his estate. Mrs. McGill died re- cently and the heirs at law now 'seek to prevent the town from entering in- to posession of the property. Great Wealth of Britain. F. W. Hirst, in New York Journal of Commerce "There never has been a time jvhen Great Britain was so prosperous or had a lar surplus. A prodigious money is coming forward in London for investment in foreign and colonial enterprises. Altogether ! the London capital issues for the year 1910 will probably total 260 or 270 ! million pounds stirling, the previous record having bedn less shan 200° mwil- lions. It might be boded ill for next year, think that the will be any want of new money. t rush came last spring with --- and rubber boom. | But in the summer months the spring the flotations were quietly digested, ey Dated: 8s much new money were availpble in 1911 a2 in 1910. The real national overflow or surplue®available for for- eign investments in a year of peace and of trade prosperity--and Proavint 1 a cheese BaVEr] of the poor $0000 NCVVVIVTVV PERT 0VV VIVE 2020S cL BIBBY'S GH OPOOPVP9000000000090400 Suit and Overcoat Sale The man who stays away from our Fifteen Dollar Suits and Overcoats will stay away from the Best Fifteen Dollar Outfit ever offered at the price, OVERCOATS, $18.50, £20, $22.50. § Bibby's Cleating Price, $15.00 ------ ¢ : tt PN PN SUITS English Worsteds in Grey, Browns, Greens, Ete, New Pattean Cat, Hand Tailored Garments. SUITS that being sold at $18 and $20. : Bibby's Special, $15.00 If we can't give y a "made to order yéur money. nN New <Q are $0000050000660508600000006 fit and won't take 'ou a "made to order" tailoring style we ¥ » We ask you to take a look at any rate. 300 Pairs of Men's Trousers, Tweeds and Worsteds. Bibby's Special, $2.00. 300 Pairs of Men's Trousers, Tweeds. Bibby's Special, $1.50. A tt Ori Ba tN i The H.D.Bibby Co The Big Store With Little Prices. SRVHITI IS IIIS TIRITRETIIIII VIII Sey VEPVVOVPLPOVVLVOVPOLPEV GV0OPPOV40000000000000 504 "THE REJUVENATION OF AUNT A SCENE WITH MAY ROBSON IN 19TH, - MARY," AT THE GRAND ON THURSDAY, JAN. A ------------------ lew ------ m-- ---- In an onplosion. in in She tumasl bait I The of Brunt Marshall ing to the Chicago erib, where many | hires Sibbald were recovernd lives wore lost by fire sever vours | the ruins of the Chander of Congnerce ' workmen ~ were ah ine | Building, Ciovionati. The men were Snamie 2a aoci- flocked in a room, and wore their ov witha crowbar : ferconts, KH Drapes & Mav) from Warrants am out is the Varmers' William J. Lind.