Irs Surprising |} what iiaprovments can be made | about the house by the use of a little paint here and there. Old chairs, old cupboards, old tables and dingy woodwork painted with THE SHERWIN-WILLIAMS PAINTS can change the whole tone of the house. A different paint for each pur- . Tell us what you want to paint and we'll tell you the right paint to use. rsmmts COLOR CARDS AT mosses Corbett's Hardware. BOW 1S YOUR APPETITE 7 Ark Is Wearkd ad Weak Us MulT BREAKFAST FOOD Experience strongly maintaine the statement that a very large sumber of young and old--go to the breakfast table each morning with wearied, weak and unhealthy appe- tites. h Uncertain and weak morning appe- tites are produced by the use of foods of a heavy, rich and starchy nature that call for too great an expendi: ture of Sneriy in the work of diges- tion. Oatmeal, cracked wheat, homi: ny and the ordinary breakfast foods are onsible for many a poor' and unheal appetite. Maly Breakfast Food made from the choicest strength-giving Wheat and the purest health-giv alt, the whole partially predigested, is what our pre sont day food experts call "a perfect health food." Malt Breakfast Food is the most delicious of all grain foods; it stands first as an energizing, sus taini and invigorating nourisher. Malt Breakfast Food "possesses tonic and corrective influence for regulating the digestive organism ; it is the only grain food that perfectly agrees with weak stomachs. At all grocers. You Can See 'The Fit When you try on one of our suite. H vou examine the garments ocarchully and imelli gently, you oan also ses the superior work: manship, the excellent finish, and the ser videnbloncss of the woods. You get Jergw per gebiaite on your investmont in wear amd work, J. R. Johnston, ee TAILOR: ad Why buy butter on the market, that you are not certain of, when you can get a nice print for 28¢. from the Clarified Milk Co. ? Their butter is guaranteed to be good. Its flavor is as perfect as skill can make it. 'Phone 567, or call at the office, corner of Brock and Bagot streets. . essesensensecsesecses JOUR STOCK : Is In Good Order. sessecsnse - 4 BRITISH WHI, 12 every. Thuewdey mornion st OF Attached fr ome of the bust 'Tob Friutim Offices in Conds; vopid, stylish and cbesy ; work; wine ny EDW. J. B. PENSE, PROPRIETOR {tHE DAILY WHIG. Opiter per Orbem Dicor.! ---- a i---- EMASHING THE MACHINE, The Toronto Mail said recently thai an issue in this election would be th people vs. the machine, A contempo rary asks, which machine? Aye, which ? The machines that bave dom real substantial service are those which the conservative party has op erated. One has been accurately de scribed in the instractions which om Freehorn got from an organizer of the conservative party in Ontario. It has several fine points, thus : 1. It will work bogus ballots inte the box if not carefully watched. In the days when conservative returning officers ruled they were expected to help in the performance of this ma chine, 2. It can make use of weak minded and reversible scrutineers. These must be kept away from the machine when it is running. 3. It can take in and mix up. with the good ballots the votes of dead and absent electors. It is, therefore, not a respecter of persons. "Hoenn toss owt the batiots 56 that in the presence of designing per- sons they may be. switched, and at one time were supplied with lead and beeswax so that with a dexterous use of these under the little fingers the ballots of certain candidates could be spoiled at pleasure. The machine described is only one of many which have been tried by the conservative party with more or less success. It is time all were smashed, and the electors at the close of this contest may make an end of them. It in to be hoped they will, though in so doing it is not likely they will add to the hilarity of the folks on the Mail. THE YOUNG MEN'S VOTES, The Brantford Courier disputes with the Whig about the franchise to young farmers: The fact rémains, however, that the conservatives refused to re cognize the farmers' sons as specially deserving of votes. The position of these young men is a peculiar one. They are wanted at home. They are useful there, and they earn a living quite as much as the young man who moves out and serves a stranger. The property qualifichAtion could not be had while a man remained with his father, and yet, as the one who man aged the farm, who kept it running, when perhaps the father on account of age and infirmity could not; he was entitled to a voice in the government of the country and the liberals gave him a vote. All the talk from this un- til doomsday will not alter the situ- ation and change the fact, The liber- als proposed that farmers' sons should have the franchise, and the conserva- tives opposed it. By the way, as the Brantford Ex- positor has pointed out, what have the conservatives to say about the performance of the party in the legis- lature during last session. The gov- ernment proposed to make voluntary, rather than compulsory, the clause in the Manhood Suffrage oath which calls upon the applicant to state that he has not received any corrupt con- sideration to induce him to register. The conservatives opposed this. Will they tell us why the Manhood Suf- frage voter should be placed under an implication that other voters de not rest under ? Will they give us a justi- fieation of Dr. Barr's insult, that the Manhood Suffrage voters were gener. ally of the working clase, and amen- able to bribery ? Will they tell us why Mr. Whitney, sat silent and permitted his lieutenants to indulge in this sort of thing without objection? It is time to speak out and offer an explanation. It is in order. -------------- WHITNEY AND THE LIBERALS. The further Wr. Whitney goed in this campaign the more mysterious ke is in his addresses. He is pro- farmers, whose interests he is said institution at fuse in his promises of benefits to the | (which in the past he tried to cripple), 1 can see this very well. If Mr. Whitey were cornered and forced to be sxplicit he would confess that he has uo plan of erecting or creating col leges. He has, probably, some thought of having agriculture taught more ful iy in the rural schools. He has simply a mind to carry wut Mr. Harcourt's proposition of education in the coun- try schools. Only that and nothing more. And yet he goes up and down the sountry and tells the people about the wonderful things he has on hand. He is going to stop the pulpwood conces- sons, and at the same time the de velopment of New Ontario; he is not z0ing to sell off the pine timber so fast as the government has been do- ing; he is going to abolish the taxes on edrporations, and, of course, he i going to reduce the annual revenue hy a very large sum. Still be is bound to boom agriculture with fifty or sixty schools ! That kind of talk may be diverting, but it is not enlightening. SPIRIT OF THE WEEK. The synod of Hamilton ana London desires the bible to be studied, as lit- erature in the schools. The grammatic- al construction of each sentence is not a matter of so much importance as the meaning which the language con- veye, ang, as one learns from Work- man, the language of the bible is made perfervid hy the imagery and symbolism of the east. There is no classic which is more appreciated than the bible, but its spirit is the one thing which, religiously, carries with it an overwhelming and permeating influence. | The "'eritical'" study of the bible is made manifest in many direc- tions and here follows some of the ex- periences of the past week. In Elizabeth, N.J., a young man was licensed to preach who declared that the story of Adam was a myth, an allegory, and that he could not conscientiously hold any other view. But he promised not to preach to this effect. In Arkansas city an eminent doc tor of divinity has made himself amenable to prosecution for heresy by stating that there were other men on the earth before Adam. These men were not much higher than the beasts. Indeed they appear, be says, to have been the same creatures that science looks for as a link in the order of na- ture between man and the apes. The tempter of Eve was not a serpent, but a man. This preacher is 5 stu dent of the sciences, and his Methodist brethren actuse him of being an evolu- tionist. He has given to the press his reasons for believing as he does, and awaits his trial for heresy. fn Brooklyn, Dr. Fagnani, the pro- fessor of Oli Testament Language and Literature in the Union Theological Seminary, made a speech on Tuesday, at a certain public function, in which he proclaimed "the doom of the old theology." He, too, discussed the story of Adam and said it was a myth. "H."" said he, "it is necessary to resuscitate a myth let us take up Eve, bis better half, as she is a more interesting subject." He did not go into details, and did not reveal the workings: of his mind, but be said enough to make people conclude that the ordinary layman may be excused for defects in his beliefs when the teacher in the theological school ex- presses his doubt about the bible stories. Dr. Fagnani, in the address already referred to, said the Presbyterian church was going to be the leading church in the time to come, because "jt was going to get rid of the old theology," and, he added, expressive ly, " All we need is a few first-class funerals." Whether of the church doctrines, or of their exponents, he did not make clear, but the effect was the same. He said, however, that from being narrow and ignorant the church was becoming quite liber: al. The word "liberal" does not describe the change which is disturb ing people and taking them out of one church into another. The. varied experiences of a week | fice illustrate the intellectual activity of the age. The heresies of the times gre THA DAILY W H1G, SATURDAY, MAY 3 eer Sl." To what is the vacuum jdue.? This is the great and gross | thought on which the leaders in the J harsh and in the moral movements should concentrate their thought. EDITORIAL BRIEFS. What is the policy of the conserva. tive party ? Can any one imagine what Mr, Whitney would do is he were elected to office ! He has no plan of action, just as be has no plan of campaign. "Honest government," is one of the cries of the conservative party. It had its origin in Otiawa, and the history of it is one of scandals from begin- ning to end. -- The Toronto Star is trying to scare people by telling them that the Morgan syndicate have laid hold up- on the CPR. and that before long the G.T.R. will be in its terrible clut- ches. Where did the World get all this news ? Mr. Crawiord, late member for Tor: onto, denies that he has a dollar in: vested in a Dakota ranch. Is he not named in connection with it? Is it to be inferred that he is farming out his influence for the good it may do him, financially 7 The combinsition of the steamship lines to divert emigration will do more than anything else to establish the fast Atlantic service, under gov- ernment control. There is a limit to the audacity of the monopolists, and that limit has been nearly reached. If the miaker thereof is to be held to account for the flavour of the cheese, he must hold the dairymen to account for the water the cows drink, and the cleanliness of the vessels in which the milk is carried. That is the deci sion of the dairymen's convention at Ottawa. -- Parliament is favourably inclined to the Bernier attempt to reach the North Pole, and may help the expe dition to the extent of $100,000. The premier's concurrence in the scheme is accepted as the endorsement of the government. But what is fo be gained by this polar expedition ? Anything of national value ? -- President Scott, of conservative association, late nominating convention with tire satisfaction. So says the Specta- tor. He elevated Mr. Colquhoun at the beginning of the meeting, and turned him down at the close. He may have exhibited great tact in the performance, but there is one man who does not see it. -------- GROWTH OF MINING INDUSTRY The Liberals Act While the Tories Talk. on Times. Heion. Mr. Harcourt proposes to es tablish a school of forestry at King ston, in comnection with Queen's uni- versity. He is well satisfied with the work of the school of agriculture and the schopl of mining already in opera- tion, and he desires a similar field of usefulness for the forestry depart- ment. While the tories talk about developing the resources of Ontario, the liberals act. Mr. Harcourt showed that the min- ing output of the province in 1896 had been 85,235,000; in 1808, $7,235, 000; in 100, 89,208,000, and in 1901, 811,822,000. In five years it had doubled. He touched upon several in- dividual mining industries, drawing at- tention to the enormous arsenic! de- posits, to the rich corundum mines, to the nickel mines which were first work- od in 1888, which in 1892 raised 72,000 tons of ore and in 1001 raised 326,000 tons of ore and employed over 2,200 men. Then he noted the wonderful expansion in the iron industry, re- minding his hearers that in 1895 no iron ore was raised, no pig-iron was made, no steel was manufactured in the province, whereas in 1901, 272: 000 tons of steel were produced; the value of the iron products of the pro- vince had risen in six years from no- thing to two and a quarter million dollars. Those figures are impressive and en- couraging. indicate a good be ginning, but they will look small ten years hence, if the electors are suf- ficiently alive to their own interests to keep the liberal government in of- the Hamilton handled the en- a Lo Backed Through A Window. car this morning, window - of Wode' al 0 4 Ag New bad just been placed in the store. In the absence of the owner, a citizen took charge of 'the horse. ------------ To-diy's Market. The market this morning was a nl ARE T0 REAR FINE BLOCKS HOGAN AND ' SMITH BROS. WILL DO IT. Quite a Number of Cases to be Heard Before the Assize Court ~Remains of John A. Shibley Reach Napanee. Napanee, May 3.-D. J. Hogan has Prd a portion of the Tichborne house lot, fronting on Dundas street, and he, with F. W. Smith & Bro, will start at once to erect an up-to date block for their iespewive busi: nesses, J. G. Daly and D. Hawkins left yes- terday for the west. They gu in the interests of the Daly tea company. The following cases have been enter- ed for trial at the assizes which open ete on May 6th, before chief justice reet. Jury Cases. Clarke vs. MoCullough--An action brought by W. H. Clarke and wile, of Deseronto, against John MeCullough and Dr. Newton, the exeomtors of the late Godirey Kolp, for nursing and taking care 'of the said Godirey Kolp during his life-time. Milligan vs Jamieson--An action ar- ising out of a case tried in the divi sion court, over the defendant chang ing a five dollar bill for the plain lr, McCormack va. township of Rich- mond--An action brought by James A. McCormack against the township of Richmond for damages for over flowing or flooding his land. Non Jury Cases. Pruyn vs. Waller--Action brought. by Mary Amelia Pruya against Thomas H, Waller, for certain goods taken from the plaintif and pool tables, ete., and converted to his own use and! for damages. Londondon Mutual vs. Snider et al: ~Action to set aside the will of Ben. C. Platt, sate of Adolphustown and also to set aside a deed. Miss Birdie Schryer has returned home after spending the past six months in New York and Watertown, N. Y. 4 Will H. Light returned last week from Killarney, Man. He will return in aw or so, and it is his inten- tion to visit the ranching district. of Alberta on his return, William Rankin confined to the house for the past five or six weeks, since the operation to his eyes, is able to attend to his business again. The remains of the late John A. Shibley are expected on the noon train to-day. The funeral will take place on Monday next at 11.30 am. REMARKABLE CURES. -- Deafness And Noises in the Head And Ears. The last issue of the "Journal for the Deaf" describes some remarkable cures of Deafness and noises in the heaa by treatment accorcing to 'the methods of Dr. Drouet, a well-known physician of the Paris Faculty of Me dicine. © For the benefit of those vho are interested in the subject, an ox- tract from the record of one case 1s reproduced here. = This is the case of A. Adams, twenty-two years old, who was 80 deaf he could not hear a watch tick unless pressed against his ears, He also suffered from constant noises in the head and discharge from the ears. He had been deal from the age of eight, and had consulted no less than eight doctors without bene ficial results. As a result of using the Drouet treatment the patient reports the following : 259, Brock Ave., Toronto, Nov. 6, 1901. I wish to write and tell you that 1 am quite cured of my deafness, and also noises inthe head, and that the discharge is quite stopped, 1 feel quite another person now, asd al ways felt miserable hefore. 1 went to five or six different doctors and hos: pitals (in England), but they did not do me any good. Had a bad ear since | was eight years old, I then went to Toronto, Canada, and also went do two doctors there, but they did not do me any good; but am glad to say that I am cured now by using the Drouet Treatment, and shall send anybody to vou that I know is suffer: ing.--I remain, yours very sincerely, A. F. ADAMS, This case, however, is only one out. of many hundreds of ite kind, in fact the success of the Drouet Treatment has become so great that the Fditor of the "Journal for The Deal" is sow publishing a "Supplement," which contains a monthly record of the cases cured by the Drouet Institute. Those who are interested in deafness, or diseases of the ear, nose, or throat, can cbtain a free copy of the "Jour: nal for The Deaf" with "Supple ment," on application to the Secre tary, Drouet Institute, 72, Regent's park-road, N.W., London, England. Each Journal is accompanied by a Patient's Report Form, which enables applicants to receive full particulars for applying the treatment at home. Any advice by correspondence is abwo- lutely free. LIEUT.-COL. GORDON, Record in Africa Results in Send- ing Him Again. Monireal Witness, Lieut. Col. W. D. Gordon, DOC. of No. 3 district, returns to South Al ent. Col. Gordon received bis instructions last night, and he at once commenced to gat i for his Suecossat, Col. of the Wom Mapted to the Change of Life. t has ¢ other adhe General omb lieved permanently ct acts in I a8 water, ine always cures. Compound always cures. lar prices. WHITE MUSLINS, all sizes. ham's pound Justifies Fler Orig- inal Signature. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. rely cute the worst forms of Female Complaints, all Ova. Inflarnmation and Ulceration, Falling and Displacement and consequent Spinal Weakness, and is peculiar move cases of Bag How Truly the Great Fame of Lydia E. Pink- Vegetable Com- y kache and Leucorrhea than remedy the world has ever known. It is almost infallible in sue cases, It dissolves and expels tumors from the Uterus in an early y of development, and checks any tendency fo cancerous humors, Irregular, Suppressed or Painful Menstruation, Weakness Stomach, Indigestion, Bloating, Flooding, Nervous Prostration, - bility quickly yields to it. troubles, causing pain, weight, and backache, instantly re. by its use. Under all circumstances it ny with the laws that govern the fomale system, and is as the uickly removes that Bearing-down Fecling, extreme lassi. tude, "don't care" and "want-to-be-left-alone" feeling, excitability, irritability, nervousness, Dizziness, Faintness, the ¥ "and. slecplessness, flatulency, These are sure. indications of Female Weakness, or some derangement of the Uterus, which this Kidney Complaints and Backache of either sex the Vegetable No other female medicine in the world has received such widespread and unqualified endorsement. No other medicine has su¢h a record of cures of female troubles. Those women who refuse te accept anything else are re warded a hundred thousand times, for they get what they want -& cure. Sold by Draggists everywhere. Refuse all substitutes, Discount Sale Stops on Tuesday at 6 O'clock. Don't say we did not give you fair warning, SHIRT WAISTS. ON MONDAY A SPECIAL SALE of balance of maker's stock of SHIRT WAISTS, bought much below rezular value, and to be sold away below value, No Discount Off This Lot, They will be marked about one-third Lelow regu~ AND: COLORED LAWNS AND If you want the cheapest and best values you ever saw in Shirt Waists be here on Monday. STARR & SUTCLIFFE'S, 18 and 120 Princess Street. Kingston, Ont, EE ------ a EXPERT Say that the cut, fit and work- manship of our clothing is ab- solutely correct. If we knew of any way to improve it, we would do so at once. We aim to give our customers the best of every. thing---and think we do. The New Cornwall and Imperial THE H. . Wha wee' pur wolder. It's ahality or forum. ¥ on THE CANADA METAL €O., Suits 'are attracting smart dress jeome, see. D. BIBBY v' OTHERS and HABFRDASHERS. TINSMITHS oh ou plesoure to work, Te ---- - ------ nian JUDGES Of course the latest kink and the last wrinkle of style is herve, 8s usual. Suits at #7, $8, 89, $10, $12, $13 and $4 naught unless 0, We Say ch. Prices count you see the ciothes, for Hall send bull, rofuod William Street Firs In Clothes Closet. AL a gharter pest nine o'clock Task night the fireren were onllod 16. the residence of J. B. MeKay, Barrie wireet, where fire had been di Tin a clothes closet vein. A Pale