Sd > SO bbdd Tree et itd SPP SPOS tdd a 2 a aaa FETIP rete DO You DRINK ? Use GOLD TIP India Blend Tea. St pleases everybody, 3bc. lh., or 8 lbs. for $1. Extracts, 2 oan. bottle, 10¢c. os Powders, 15¢c. and 26ec. ny Cream. is an excellent toilet article--big bottle, 25c. and Life After Sickness and Suffering. in a Perilous Condition. The liver, the largest and one of the most important organs of the body #5, to thousands of young and old, » source of suliering. It has been truly said that a diseased liver means physi cal and mental tortures and dangers. common symptoms of liver com ..are ® of appetite, nausea, furred tongue, constipation, re ood, headache, depression of i te and a host of other evils. Are you a victim of liver complaint? you experience any of the symp toms noted above ? If so, do not fail to make immediate use of Paine's Cel ery Compound, the only medicine that directly strikes the root of the trouble, and that infuses new life into inactivh orghn. Rachel Me Rae, Guelph, Ont., cured by Paine's Celery Compound, writes thus : "For nine years 1 had hoen troubled 'with liver complaint, and often had very bad spells from it, 1 called in a doctor, who relieved me, but | remain «od weak, and could neither cat or sleep, and 1 suffered so much with my head that T procured a bottle of ~ Paine's Celery Compound, and before | had the contents used, 1 could eat and sleep well, and the vain in my head was gone. | took the second bottle, and have never been troubled with + liver complaint since. Your compound has, built me up and completely cured me." SKATES 1095 Reduction. Strachan's Hardware Disinfect. Disinfectants -- There is scarcely a home that would not be the better for the use of a reliable Disinfectant. "All excreta from Typhoid ts should be thorou- ghly disinfected. It is criminally negligent not to do this, + We have a full line of ics and Disinfec- at right prices. ie m's Drug Store, incess Street, i Ra ed Attached one Printing Offices n odds wa and cheap work; nine Toe irifih Whig Poblihing Company, Limited EDW. J. B. PENSE, Director. TT TH TTR -- TIIE DA'LY WHIG " "Opifer per Orhem Dicor.' A CANDIDATE IN SORROW. William Munns, who had a burning desive- to represent North York in the lesislatuire, and hecame a temperance candidate without endorsement and without invitation, has written a let- ter to the press. In it he astacks the temperance societies and the church because they did not rally to his ¢ port. He is wards the member of the Ontario Al limnce, who, at Aurora, held him up, demanded whom he represented, and read a letter which caussd his down fall. The ministers of the gospel and of grace come in for a scarifying be. came they favoured the liberal candi date and refused to desert him with up- particularly savage to out occasion and without cause, "If," says Mr. Munns, "the temperance movement is to succeed it must be lifted from the arena of party poli tien." The pity is that he did not make this discovery Had be not have made a guy of himself and not have entered a campaign in which he was not want ed. He abuses the church and the lib eral party because they did not prefer him to Mr. Davis, who has been a sooner, done so he would has temperance man all his life, and done his share to promote the tem perance sentiment of the country. To some enemy of good government Wr. Munns has listened or his own inord inate ambition has led him astray, and because he made a fool of himself and had to fly before an angry populace before he recovered his senses, he is There are few izo with him. very sore. to sympath A DISPOSAL WORKS. Sventually the city will have to un dertake the construction of a sewage disposal works, 'The sewage should not be into the water at Kingston or at any other point in the luke or river, and legislation must be had to make this illegal. The ery generally is against the impurity of the water, and it is difficult to imagine how it could be otherwise when the towns and citice along our waterways deposit all manner of filth into them. The iv not as much afficted by this pro- eveding as one would think, and in its long and varied course it under goes a process of purification. Still, as the population inercases the vol ume of sewage the greater, and the water domestic poses becomes more and more con taminated. Advanced life demand the purity which can only be dumped out great body of water becomes used for pur and science had by a different disposal of sewage inland towns and cities this re is very Some of the have been experimenting in their Kingston has object lessons and valuable, Teaver home, in the sanitary arrange spect, experionce ments of the asylum and penitentiary The city itself must sooner or later arrange to carry its sewage to a point outside the limits, where it may be deposited fnto septic tanks, wher the water the where, may be purified chemically, and solids converted, as els The works department may be as exacting is into fertilizers. water as it pleases about methods for drawing water from the harbour, but so long as the sewage is disposed of as it is now there will be the danger of taint to the water and disease from its use COLORED MEN'S STANDING There is great feeling in the United States over the proposal of Virginia to disfranchise the coloured people The embodied sure which has yet but in a law and will surely in a mea to be considered, which has been passed be enforced unless the Court of the United States, to which appeal is being made, de decides it not idea is Supreme otherwise. It is a question with some whether the court can do anything. The state has a right to de termine the status of the voters, It class for reason. The men who would deprive the col the gov have a not can disfranchise any of a voice in of the but it is one which may be accepted now Cuyler, of New York, and a personal friend of the late President Lincoln, in his the Civil War," conviction oured people ernment state may reason, Good Dr. "Recollections of expresses the that congress committed a serious er ror when it bestowed the right of suffrage indiscriminately upon the male negro 'population of the south. "A man," said he, "who had been all his life a 'personal chattel' sud denly transformed into a sovereign ol was ector. Instead of this precipitate leg islation it would have restrict the been wiser to suffrage to those w ho ae quire a proper education and perhaps also a cortain amount of taxable pro perty. This policy would have avoided unhappy friction the and, what is more important, it 'woul! have offerad a powerful inducement to every coloured man to fit himself for between races, the honot and grave responsibility of citizenship. At this time one of 'the woblest efforts made by wise philan- thropy is that of educating, elevating d evangelizing our coloured fellow countrymen of the south. To help the negro to help himself is the key note of these efiorts."" It is nearly "forty years since the war, since the emancipation of the ne- groes in the United States. Genera- tions have passed away and with then the prejudices, the imperfections, the defects of the older classes. A new race has practically appeared, free to live, labour, vote and serve as they pleased, as they were trained and edu cated. There may have been objection to the enfranchisement of the negro after the war, but there should not be | any objection to it now, and Vir gina's action is difficult to understand. The colored man ought to be able to rise upon hic merits. He ought to he able to vote when he is helping to bear the burdens of the state. He should be allowed to fill an office for which he has the qualification. He ought to be permitted to play the man EDITORIAL NOTES. If some people's ideas of sanitation and water supply were carried out the city would have to undertake an ex penditure of $100,000 or. £150,000, the they when it is The doctors generally advise people to boil the water drink. If salted a little healthy and pala which cooled it beconws table. -- The call from a salary of $3,000 a year to one of $600 a year is not oft- en heard, but it is the call which Rev. A. D. Diober, of Syracuse, has acted upon, The genuineness of it hardly be doubted. can Organ grinding in all kinds of wea ther, and producing music that is far from captivating, sometimes pays. A man who is missed off our streets, left 812, who has been called to rest, 000 to enquiring friends. Mr. after. two defeats for the : think he of the presidential candidate And if he the Bryan, seems to must the democratic side. doesn't the convention, what then ? on endorse nominee of for the candidate That is papers are now Cleveland a possible the presidency in 1901! way some democratic talking. He is a possibility but not a 1 robability. | The Phy ians of the Sick Childven's Haspital, ojeration in a case of orthopedic de formity which was declined by Ir Lorenz. They adopted his however, and are to be complimented Toronto, have performed an methods if they have succeeded. Rat Portage secks "with or without power to issue, of the with the proceeds the consent " bonds of which to go ratepayers,' into the development of water power, and municipal owner ship of the electric light, telephone and fire alarm business. The people should have the right brake when they like. to apply the all along its moved by the end of March. The Winnipeg Free Press says a vear ago The. C. P. R. promised to have the wheat of the North West, line, some of there was the old stock in store when the new grain began to ar rive. The same thing is likely to hap jen again. OBSERVATIONS. News From Abroad. Toronto Mail mgston water is being tested for microbes and in the meantime that staid town is drinking only aerated water with a dash of microbe-killer nit He's A Cute One. London News Castro has so framed matters as to make the foreign merchants pay the Venezuelan "debit. Castro apparently i= not such a fool as some of the na tioms judge him to be. Dire Insult To Ottawa. Brockville Recorder Foronto wants to control Ontay water power and Ottawa asks to ix placed in charge of the weather Be tween these two graspers, ordinary people won't have much left A Guileless People. Toronto Star the circumstance that many of the people of Kingston have had involun tary duekings in air holes this winter gives force to the Hamilton charge that the people of Kingston don't know enough to keep out of the wet, anyway. The Old, Old Story. Toronta Giobe t looks as if one of the prime is sues in the Provincial elections in Manitoba when they come on will be the respective merits of and free trade. Mr. Roblin his protective colors to the protection has nailed mast, And They May Not. Exchange { In response to Premier Balfour's ap peal for more harmony, Hon. Edward Pr lake, M.P, and William Redniond EMP, will arise en! BRU their swe { rorreny voices in that well known bal lad, "Go Way Back and Sit Down." ---------- | | Truth alone can form the character and monld the niind Surely it is better to be poor than ignorant. Remember difficaltics are not impos sibil tics. TI -- A REPLY MADE BY INSPECTOR © GLIDDEN JO rik A of being compelled to shut THE DAILY WRIG, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 24 'THE PROTEST Of Liquor Dealers--Claim$ That They Are Not Hampered--The Law is Clear, and Should be Obeyed. Kingston, Feb. 33.--(To the Editor): As there are usually two sides to most questions, and interested persons ever ready to catch the ear of newspaper renorters in order to get their imagin ary grievances gratuitously and ang nymously ventilated and advertin another specimen of which appeared in vour lust Friday night's issue, where a so-called "Local Licensed Vietual ler," m discussing the night previous, the eases recently before the police magistrate is reported to have stat. ed under your heading wre hamper ol," that received "they Z had never a {their Fawitreating. instead of "Hacilitating | gue---------- [ie movements" gnd efforts to SUPpress | bit, as they 'are asked to do It is aut-' terly: absurd for such people to con- ; off | {their liquor trade sh .rp at eleven o'clock at night, for if it were twelve | or anv later hour, they would still be di satiefied, unless thy were given the! whole twenty-four hours of every day! unrestrained and unmolested. | | The reasonable men of the trade are not #0, hut are glad, like other good citizens, to stop their regular and lawful when the closing hour arrives, so that they can retire with their familics to secure that ne- cessury rest or recreation which we all need, instead of night-hawking and peering around hy themselves and if the inspector is in dangerous proximity, and by so doing giving intemperate temper- ance extremists to complain, as they constantly do. that the license laws | are--frecly broken, and not fully and properly soforeed It will thus be that "the authorities." whoever are, vour humble servant, I sup work aids to see cans to seen they x RRR RSET SII FINE DELICATE TEAS LIKE : 9 SOOT. ING 70 THE NERVES AND sNVIGORATING 1¢ THE SYSTEM. BLENDED IN GLD LUNDON. - ALL PRICES AT YOUR uc SLL PRICES AT YOUR GROCERS: . THAT NEW SUI You are thinking of getting. If it's on the Fashion Plate, is here, ready to wear the moment you put it.on. rele You'll admire yourself and feel as though others admired you=and they will, too. Itdon't take such an awful lot of money to dress well when you know where to trade. You may have a corps of tailors dancing at your attendance, but none of them can design for you prettier garments than these SPRING SUITS which we are now showing $17, $15, $13.50, $12.50, $12, $10, $8. MISS HILDA CLARK. way, pray ? and by whom ? Is it the municipal taxation he here refers to? one, which all not excepting himself, of course, must of necessity bear a share of, there being no other means that [| know of by which to raise the necessary revenue. What in this has he to complain of ? We have nothmg to do with this nor with the applied "to other merch citizens, by laws as ants. Is it 'not fair and necessary, case as well as in that of all others to be taxed ? Permit me this doleful complainer in what way he and those for whoin he assayed togspeak in his to ask have been unfairly treated "and i what way have they been hounded No innocent man can be hounded, if there is nothing to hound him infer, and so he need no care. Does he he that he should » allowed, undis wd, to do as he pleases in ignoring the license law, which he admits to be all right, and in selting it and "the authorities" at definnce ¥ What ave "the authorities" for but to endeavor, to the best of their ability, to enforee the law with which they ave entrusted ? As to th "exacting Tr ictions" complained of hy this fault-tinder, I would ask him if there i: a single unfair or unrequir wd rule in the whole series of local re trulutions ? and if they are not all ne (essary ? dh ing him tobe the judg and according to the knowledge which he pos of what possibly gors in his own place of business, ome others similarly While pretending, be satisfied with the license law as it is, in the next breath he shows dis satisfaction with the hours defined by it in which they are not permitted t. Li on and in constituted ? in one breath, to do business, and that "an inspector is appointed to see to it that they re spect the law in all its exactings," an admission which proves that he knows what the law is, and that it is neces sary and right to enforce it, which ig true: and at same time shows that he i= dissatisfied because it is enforced Nice consistency truly. Now there can be no dispute with this discontented vietualler in his claiths that their busi ness is av legitimate as any other but what r 'tions are required in other lines of commeree compared wit} those found necessary to be enacted for the regulating of such a place as that conducted 3 this disgrunt dealer, who, I venture to believe, does not begin to live up to what is re quired of him by the necessary reguls- tions of which he so bitterly com plains, but which will shortly have to be enforced in his case as well as that of some others who fail to comply, tod much lenies and patience in thet cases having heen too long shown in the past, =o that nothing but prosecution now remains to be applied The popular cothic opera singer, w ho was married, Fehruary 18th, to Frederick Flower, a nephew of ex-Go vernor [lower, of New York. The bride has announced her permanent retirement from the stage. 4 | : : fair treatment from the authorities," | pose, heing the one mainly aimed at, but were 'hounded from one vear's | have to take all the kicks and euifs of end to another'; that they had to | the dissatisfied. unreasonable and im pay a high license to do a legitimate | practical, but. utterly seltish, parti business," yen, verily, and not an il- | 7ans, of both sides, and look happy, legitimate business, which the "local | All right: so mote it be; 1 am al restrictions" he complains' of were | Ways oper--to the reception of all passed to help to prevent; that "they such flattering compliments;. so cone are heavily taxed besides." In what | ny Macduff, and hauged be he who o one ever heare anv reputable ho tl men wh serves the law and | onducts his business ga it thould be, and there are « ¢ a number of h in our aunkly and cheorfulls puamit, «¢ envy of the (LT aginary gv which your promp ter so strong fenounces, It nly those such as he, I surmise, who are constantly s hemi to do all the business pos and illegitimate, in regular pro hibited = hours alike, and to capture every five cents in reach or available, | and to thwart the efforts of the in- | spector in his endeavors to prevent pressers, at | tled. It is all having to shut "Hold, enough." oth to complain of irst cries, 1 hars at eleven or seven o'clock at night Any one who does so gives imseli, as to his desires and inten tions, completely away, for there is no use in being allowed to have a ar-room open and people to be jn it, if no liquor can be sold to them du ing that period. Therefore to find people there after be lawicl closing hour arrives, whe ther on Saturdav or anv other night, is «imply a proof of intention to break the law by disposing of liquor present. © Hence, it is quite to close sharp on time, as o those YecLEsary Try Barrington English Hats. 1903 styles are here. $2. $2. For sale only at © : THE Hd. D. BIBBY CO. : ) ® One Price Clothing House, OAK HALL. 8 EXPRESSING SYMPATHY. HIS ROMP ENDS IN DEATH. Falls From Fourth Storey With Child in Arms. Resolution of Condolence Passed By Leicester Lodge. At a meeting last night of Leicester Lowell, Mass., Feh. 24. --James J, Lodge, No. 33, S.0.E.B. society, the | Dowrs, aged thirty, while romping a following resolution of condolence, the fourth floor pressing sympathy with the family of | the Burh ank block, on Prescott stro the Inte Dr. Smythe, was passed : with his two-year-old daughter, Ma garet, in his arms, fell against a wi ..the 'members of Leicester Lodge | | i I , S.0.E.B. Socie assembled | dow and pitched headlong through n, wish to express our heart- with the child to the ground. felt sympathy with the family of our we: child was instantly kill late respected brother; KE. H. Smythe, De broke his left hip and fractu leven means eleven, and not five, ten, | and desire to remember with affection |. ed his skull, and is in a eritical co ifteen, twenty, or thirty minutes | (he number of vears in which he was | dition. hereafter, or any other time, and it connected with our order, being, in | ® as much an offence not to do 0 on | fact, one of the founders of the local Where Cheese Is Ripened. week nights as it is from seven on |wodge. eighteen years ago; and of his Aboui the famous Roquefort che faturday night to Monday morning, |'inierest in its working ever since. ire following legend: is told: A + vhich the--vact provides tor, anu ic | Also, the, deep - regret with" which . wa herd lad, having more hmeheon than was found necessary to apply it tas) heard of his ceath." We may feel sure [Le conld eat, laid a portion of | he other nichts of the week nae well, | (),t as it was the will of our Heav- | bread and cheese upon a natural «lel when the sale of liquor is prohibited. | |v her, suddenly to take him |in one of the caverns nearby. He fi the other side having been presented from the midst of his labors, his work | all about it until several mont! hy some sore: and interested m1 Hes well done, and it was time to er i when he found the cheese, feel it right on Py part to present the |.) into rest. We trust that his loved | tead of being dried up or rotten, w Ippastes Shel of the question, so that | ne leit behind mav realize, though | rich, moist, creamv and streaked with ll might have a fairer and better un- he 'is not here, he. has hut gone le [reenish-blue veins. He shared h lerstanding of it. , i { a 2 u fore, and will he waiting to recive | pice of cheese with others, and tl n conclusion. I have to sav that ha he | + 1 | lagers we wk . rth the. term "Hosnsed. victualier,"" [chase §. HEHE 30 L1e gnansion above, Whep | villagers were atlick to recognise 1 " : their Life's work is: done, and they, |imoroved texture 1 quality. Hence ¥ one section of the liguor trade to ines ta 3 forth al iro} oy fesignate their business, is misan. themselves, are called home forth all their « roses were take 5 u . a 1} a a these ¢ st wn. The caves wi ulied and misleading misnomer, as no BY 0 npen Bo, £8 wtel or. tavern-keeper roquires a li International Visit. naw owned Lea company. which or cense to qualify him to provide vic The Clayten (N.Y.,) On-The-St rs six hundred wonien to tend th tual to his eustomers, his liquor fi Lawrence, of last week, speaks thus [© or cense compels him to do that on | of a recent visit of Kingston ice -- very reasonable and necessary occa yachtsmen to that town: Sunday was Wilton Warblings. « in the case of travellers, | un ideal day for ice boating. A deléga Wilbur, Feh, 23.--Rev, Mr. Nichol « vhich is the only license there is, and { tion of nine boats from the Kingston | Queen's Unive r, conducted tl not for the sale of food or lodging. | jen Yacht Club came down the river [church services last Sunday. On Fri Why doesn't vour comy lainant do his | Clayton. Snow Cloud, Speedwell, | day, Feb. 13th, a party of voung pe own writing and put his own name Jack Frost, Pastime, Frontenac, Ice [ple met at Caldwell's Lake to enim to it in a manly. open manner, and Kinz, Flying Fox, Scud, Joker. The | the skating; afterwards they proceed not act che coward under the wing of gentleraen wh amie with them were | ed to the house of Mr. Jackeon, wher Your reporter, and thus throw soe (foe g @ I Harry B. Mills, W, | they hal games and refreshments. A picion Bn some innocent brother in Co Kent, ildersleeve, J. B. Car- 1 surprise party assembled at the hows the trade, who would Seon to he ruthers, FE. V. O. Hewitt, H. 8. Lo of: Thomas lee, Lavant Station, or guilty in thus acting *--W. GLIDDEN. can, (. V. Straubenzie, J. H. Macnce, | Fe'ruary 18th, A very pleasant time -_ Francis Macnee, Capt. Logie, Capt. | was s ent. Mrs. Tee looked charming. Strauhenzie. The fleet was met at Cu | and Mr, Lee played his hest sel Point, ahont fifteen miles above, by | tians on the viplin. The voung pe Capt. Charles Waldron send Capt. | "trinped the light fantastic toe" wu Charles Sevmour, of the Clayton Tce | til the wee sma' hours and the cuests Yacht club. avith the yachts Mirage | thought the oceasion one of the most and Allatross snd escorted to Clay- | enjoyable of 'the season. ton. The visiting yachtsmen dined at re the Hubbard and returned late in "he Pointed Paragraphs. afternoon, There were thre viubts| Chicago News from the Gananoque Ice Yacht clu in If polities were religious more men jort at the time. would attend church \ k w Where there's a will two or mare lawyers. usually there's Pays Penalty On Scaffold. Stroudsburg, Pa.. Feb. 20.--The first | 1b Seems queer that people lose seeution in Monroe county in many ma more things than they i ; ears took lack to the victim k or ohvious reasons a bo selh sing. Charles: Gather. the burales | ould not acquire the art of 'hoo! 2 . keepi vho shet and killed Constable Adam \ ng. ir When some men stand on their di trimmers and § has strike of cutters, Toronto, Lhe been set- the last few days. will be completed by December next. Funk. Grether was considered one of |. f , nity "thov oo iit sans of ~ « ? # the most desperate criminals: with i i ¥ have no visible mea < wv : & . ) eH wry - which the county authorities ever had PI ~~ Ln 3 A . : : ' | to deal. Twice, after his conviction, he The T : Kas a i "ls Dr. Chargem Highe a good doc escaped from nil ud one a y godt wl pr tor ¢ om -- i we Carnegie ofle xX. Pan z : : " & vide sites y ® 1 g a by Sure. He fills thi hill perfectly J. Gault, formerly church warden of | for. TUS. Without submitting a nn 18t. James the Apostle, Montreal, now | RB : : Tha Tog : ) Be IY ad men exense their faults; co The Taff Vale railroad case, involv. living in v York; has given 810.0001 "avi pi thelr ing many questions of importance to to clear off the church's debt. with | em Ses) : ' Er------------------------------------ trade unionism, has ended with the the wpderstandine that the cong rn payment of 8115000 by the secretary tion rai ining £3,000 > on every of railroad servants to the plaintiff The Pe ¢ Portiand Cement com 0 ! th 0 { box. 25¢ company. pany have given out contracts for Q . asa" 4 winine in 2 Days 00,0%0 worth of cement machinery in They say the works 9 axntive Bromo Cures 1 Cold in One Day, > For seroful mia, stoma bowel disord wasting di Angier's Pe Emulsion wit phosphites scribed by cians, Itisy to take and with the stor It prevents and cx ordered condition stomachand intesti fermentation, clea foul mucus, destro; teracts poisotious the blood, alleviate tation and heals tl membranes. It al gestion, improves regulates the bo helps create firn flesh. Ask your for it. -~ Bn a ration iy fs such an excellent itself to the front and stomach Baltimore, Md. Angler's Petroleum Emulsion fs evccywhere. Remember the nan ting Angier's. Large size, $1. NGIER CHEMICAL OSTON, MASSACHUS! A man's opin: himself may greatly infl enced by the he wears, 6 £4 ET Shi give a man a of luxury an finement whi will shew it in the satis expression o face. Look for this name inside t For sale at all best déa "ISN'T T, THAT COU It is our earnest desire a regular and pleased ¢ do not believe in long arguments. Our large s drugs, proprietary me fumes and toilet specia close prices, will impre: favorably than long new HAVE YOU USE Have you used Paine's pound ? If not, we sir mend its use if you are ne rundown, or suffering f tism; neuralgia or bl Paine's Celery Compound reliable and efficacious before the public for rel strength. Our stock is and pure. Henry Wade, LC King street, Kings! IT { THE MOST NUTRI EPPS'S C An admirable food Ita natural qualitie fitted to build up a tain robust health, i sist winter's extre Sold in one-quart tine, labelled JAM & do., Limited, H thic Ohepainis, Long land EPPS'S Cl GIVING STRENG1T VIGOUR. ®e000000c000000 We Are Prep: For Your : SPRING OI Call and see our seloction ° z elsewhere. ® sCrawford & ® Merch nt Tailors, * Princess and Bi . eoe eoce0es LATEST SONGS AK Burgomaster,"' Vocal * ere Sone Pooks fror Wid Rose Folios, for piano. Nos. 1..2, » Royai Felio \ d_Piatio Fo Mandolin Banjo and Gu New Songs of every des Agent for Litoll, Peters, Wood editions Trinl arder will convince will he saved by. patronizi date Music Store. STREET, £88 PRINCESS