Daily British Whig (1850), 1 Dec 1903, p. 3

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0US SURGERY, WS The Surgeon: fot the Surgeons f Course--He ond fou Can. -- » Cure Cures Pilg Painlessly, Withoy long for years suffer ¥ try this and dein y from carrying a buck. treatment from 5 ph obtain temporary relief Y are never quite cured, in lifting, excessive f, constipation or g little the piles come back . seem: to amount 1 banish sleep and 4 pe ntlon is comfortahle e local pain and that of weight in the per- early stages some of es on sale wil] afford £ If the case js of here is only one speady v. It is Pyramid File light cases it is the use. Other applica. and may not. Pyramiq _ certain, always reli. ings comiort at ope saves months of severs ireme cases it will save ions, and their attend- l discomforts. It is bet. nife. Will cure easier, fer. Thousands have nds have been cured by trifing compared with [he price -is-50c. "Mogg gladly pay ten dollars es. sell Pyramid Pile Cure Drug Co., Marshall, book on Causes ang vhich is sent free for ON OF COLDS rable by: drinking MAGI ATERS re especially beneficial, VERYWHERE. hops Drug using Over 300,000 ... CURES 2 Address Keeley Institute. " 786 Queen St, W, Toronto, Ont otos Et and finest photos 5.2 Ames ings = and at Weese's. Paper ymnants, cheap at Neat ANOS ; argains, 2 Chances at to buy, should reek's " Special." ° Princess St, y celebrated Mason JMS Rr 3c. to 75¢C. Albums, Albums ph Albums, etc. SBET, Book Store. \TEMAN IAGE LICENSES, | FIRE INSURANCE KER. street. 'Phone 396. 28 Svdenham 8t 1 Carving. tached to two alms- tham, near Redcar, Sir William Turner or of London, is 2 of St. George, ani f a single block of k of a poor prison d. at £2,000. tis sce of carving was ger being once laid to its entirety. To vork was one single was plunged into a and allowed to re II doubts were set 'as withdrawn and complete. The pris ished this marvel used an ordinary $15 Only. Worth y $20. . New York clothing will make to or soat "for $15, guar fit and good trim- to choose CLT AEN ERA EXGURS 10s °F Western Points and Pacific Coast inn Until 2Nov. 30th, Colonist Fares*From INGE TON, a Joe Victoria, V4 Suit, Victatia, V thorn For $46.30 For further information apply to J. P. HANLEY, Agent, City Passenger Depot. 'nm -------------------------------------- Kingston & Pembroke & Canadian ' Pacific Railways, REDUCED FARES PACIFIC POINTS Until Nov. 30th, 1908, Colonist Fares From KINGSTON TO nda, Batte, rings, Denver, lake ......iiceiininiinn San Francisco, Los Angeles. Full particulars at . & P. and 0. P. BR, Ticket Office, Ontario St. ¥. CONWAY, F. A. FOLGER, JR, Gen. Pass. Agt. Gen. Supt. THEBAY OF QUINTE RAILWAY HEW SHORT LINE FOR Tweed, Napanee, Deseronto, and all lo- ¢al points. Train leaves City Hall De- wot at 4 p.m. F. CONWAY, Agent, 4. Q. Ry., Kingston. DOMINION LINE STEAMSHIPS PORTLAND-RALIFAX--LIVERPOOL Cheap Trip to Europe CHRISTMAS SAILINGS : 8S "CANADA" from Portland, Nov "OAMBROMAN" from Portland, De "DOMINION from Halifax, .. Dec. X 8.8. """CAMBROMAN" carries only | second and third class passengers, second class having the same accommodation as was previously given first class Rate $37:50. For further particulars apply to PI ANLEY, G.T.R 28th h J. P. GILDERSLEEVE, 42 Clarence St The Deminion Line, Montreal & Port- lend. os' BERMUDA Ra THG NOW FAR FAMED DERMUDAS, with eable communicatien and eguable winter temperature of 65 degrees, beau- tiful scenery and 100 miles of good roads, headquarters of the British North American Squadron, is unrivalled in its attractiveness, reached by the first-class iron steamers TRINIDAD or PRETORIA in forty-eight hours from New_York. Sailing Jortuightly up to 1st January and every THURSDAY thereafter The tropical islands, including 'SANTA CRUZI, ST. KITTS, MARTINIQ ST LUCIA, BARBARDOES AND DE ARA, also afferd beautiful and interest- ing tours, all reached by steamship of the Quebec Steamship Company, sailing from New York about every 10 days, For descriptive pamphlets and dates of sailing apply to A. EMILIUS OUTER BRIDGE & CO., Agents, 39 Broadway, New York; J. P. HANLEY or J. P E, Kingston, Ont N, Secretary, Quebec ALLAN LINE Liverpool and Londonderry. From Montreal: From Quebec: Parisian, Nov. 21, 7a.m., Nov. 21,3 p.m From St. Johns. Frem Halifax, Pretorian, -- -- Nov. 30. Bavarian, Dec Dec. 7 5, First Cabin.--HReduced winter rates, $55, and upwards, according to steamer Second Cabin.--Liverpool and' London. derry, $87.60 to $40, according to stea- mer. London, $3.50 extra Third Class --$25 and $26; Liverpool, Derry, (Belfast Glasgow, London. Through tickets to South Africa. New York to Glasgow Laurentian, .. ... . Nov. 26, 11 am First Cabib--$45 and upwards--2nd Cabin--$85. 3rd Class, $26. J, P. HANLEY, Agent, G.T.R, City Powis Bee" Ae Too Bl BLEEVE, Clarence streot. ET IEPA TI TT TO-LET. STORAGE, FOR FURNITURE, dwallings, stores and offi Cann's Real Estate street, COMFORTABLE ROOMS AND BEST table hoard, if desired. Can be had at 189 Earl strect. Modern conven- iences. ALSO nd offices, Mc Office, 51 Brock TWO LARGE SHOPS, 42 and 44 PRIN- cess street, also two dwellings, and stone stable. Rent low to a desir- able tenant. Apply 249 Brock street. ------------------------------ FINE STORE, 165 PRINCESS street. Possession Dec, Ist. Altera- tions to swit desirable tenant. Ap- py a C. H. Powell, 108 Raglan toad. CANNEL COAL BOR ve YOUR GRATE. It lasts all night, Try i .P. WALSH - 53-57 Barrack Street. We build our rubbers on the latest foot forms. We watch leather foot- gear styles--there is not a new shape we do not aot know of. : We make our rubbers They are fashioned to wear--protect and fit, well. There is fifty years experience behind each 'pair of CANADIAN RUBBERS wz CAN'T arrono TO MAKE MIST:KCS. MARKET REPORTS. Toronto Street Market. ley, 4dc. to dve.; rye fic.; peas, 65¢c.; ha) mixed or clover, $7 to ¥9,; straw, sl 20 to 11; straw, loose, ¥6; dressed hogs, light, cwt., $6.75; dress ed, heavy, $6.25; butter, pound rolls, 20c. to ¥ eggs, new laid, 33¢, to 10c.; fowls, per lb., 5c. to 6c.; spring chickens, per pair, 60c. to $1; ducks, per lb., 10c. to lle; geese, per lb., Ye. to 10c.; turkeys, per lb., 12c. to lc.; apples, per barrel, §1 to ¥2; ap ples, per basket, 25¢. to 35c.; car rots, per dozen, 15¢c. to 20c.; toma- toes, per basket, 30¢. to 50c.; beets, per dozen, l5c¢.; cabbage, per dozen, 10c.; cauliflower, 81.76; lecks, per dozen, 50c.; leeks, green, per bunch 15¢c.; rhubarb, per dozen, ec.; lettuce, per dozen, 40c.; celery, per dozen, 40c. to 60c.; vege- table marrow, Jc; squash, 10c, to 15¢c.; beef, hindquarters, $6.50 to $8. 50; beef, forequarters, $4 to $5.50; sheep, 35 to $5.50; lambs, 26 to $7; calves, per lb., 6c. to Ye. Live Stock Markets. Montreal, Nov. 30.--About 900 head of butchers' cattle, 20 calves and 800 sheep and lambs were offered for sale at the East End Abattoir to-day. The butchers were out strong, and trade was fair, with a brisk demand for anything good among the cattle and lambs. G. Martel paid 4jc. per lb. for four prime steers, and Joseph Richard paid 44c also paid 4ic. per lb. for 50 goad | lambs. Pretty good cattle sold at from 3jc. to 4c. and the common stock from 2c. to 3e. per lb., while the canners paid from lic. to 2c. per Ih. for the culls. Sheep sold at from 24c. to 3ic., and lambs at from» 4c to 4jc. per Ib. Good lots of fat hogs sold at from 5c. to Sie. per lb. » ole a * 2 a 4 > » . - . 2 o a et et w By oe LY bg Ld. . » eel L D ov? ( XN \ » 4 w) ) - " mn "hl Brica-full of Health and Energy. Life is worth living when one can awake after a good night's sleep-- ready for anything the day may bring. Eye clear ; tongue clean ; liver active ; stomach right ; band steady and every nerve vibrating with that splendid sense of the power of perfect heaith. Too few enjoy this enviable morning awakening, but Effervescent Iways be de upon to --- we» oy yp con- dition and keep you in. good sound health. A fe laxative iv helps the system of poisenous livge: and ture to ri Toronto, Nov. 30.-- Wheat, white, | S04c.; wheat, red, 804c.; wheat, gdose, dc. to Tlc.; oats, Cc. to 32c.; bar- | >; buckwheat, | ¥10 to ¥11; hay, | Jc. to B0c.; cabbage, red, each, 5c. to | per dozen, $1.25 to | per lb. for four others; he i Gold in the : Guwilight. 2000 000000000000 ep ssese want to be an author-- My hand upon my face, A thought upon my forehead-- An air of studied grace ! 1 want to be an author, With genius on my brow; I want to be an author, And I want to be it now ! ee Te The editor of this column would lite very much to divulge the name of the Kingston damsel whose souliul aspira- tions are voiced in the above short, but expressive poem, but a pledge of secrecy, sternly forbids. >» us . One by one, they go,0ur ideas re | garding the attributes peculiar to. wo man. Go, driven forth hy cold, hard, {ugly facts. The latest {o depart is j the belief that woman, and a light { footfall were synonymous terms. The | day is over when a poet with any truth could sing ** Even Je light harebell raised it's cad, Elastic from her airy tread." Now even a springboard would hard ly venture to 'raise its crushed and F trampled self, after a couplt of our dear girls had passed over it. In twos and threes they make a fair imitation of a detachment of Grenadier Guards, and they seem to be rather proud than otherwise, of the row they make. And its not the fault oi the low-heeled, common-sense boot, either. You can walk just as quietly in them { as in a thin-soled, high-heeled slipper-- | more quietly, for the high heel will | make a clatter, do what you will. The heavy, noisy, blundering tread, is unhappily but too indicative of the loss of fine. feeling, of tactiulness, of daintiness, of quick thought for others, of gentle modesty, of unobtru siveness which is becoming painfully apparent among' the younger women of { to-day. | "Her feet have touched the meadows | and left the daisies rosy," gnoted Rus- | kin, ia his "Queen's Gardens," and { went on to say, "The path of a good | woman is strewn with flowers, but they rise behind her footsteps, not he | fore them."" Ambition to leave behind {her such a flower-strewn path, seems | far from the mind of the average girl | to-day. we Nrs. Carre, of Belleville, is the | guest of her sister, Mrs. Grout. Mrs. A. G. Burrows, nee Armstrong, will reccive on Tuesday and Wednes- day afternoons, December 1st and 2nd, at the residence of Mrs. John Wil liams, corner Queen and Charles streets, Belleville Mrs, J. W. Rankin will receive at her home, 21 Rideau street, on Thurs- day and Friday, afternoon and even ing. Canon Loucks, with Mrs. Loucks and Miss FEthelwyn Loucks, came down from Picton to-day, and are the guests of Mrs. Muckleston. . Mrs. A. W. Richardson will not be at home on Thursdays till the begin- ning of the New Year. Miss "Violet White returned to-day to Hamilton. Rev. J. H. H. and little Master Harry, little Miss Frances Colanan arrived tofday from Stirling and are at St. James' rectery. oe The new Historical Society wiil meet to-night at the Y.W,C.A, rooms at 8 p.m. Great encomagement has been given the workers by*two subscrip tions of $10 cach, one being given { by the honorary president, Miss Gil dersleeve, and the other by Mr. C. F. Gildersleeve. rr . The Misses Adair are being much entertained, and thanks to their hos- pitable hostess, Miss Greene, are see- Montreal at "its best. In Miss ing Rhona Adair's appearance therfe is nothing to suggest the *'skirt parted from shirt waist' golf girl whom most of us have met with now and again, and who has unfortunately grown to be taken as a type, a fact that the genuinely smart girl golfer is certain to object to if she takes time to think of the matter. The Misses Ad air according---to present plans sail for from New York on December home 12th Mr. and Mrs. Thomas 1. Paton, Montreal, entertained at dinner last week for Mr. F. Potter, brother of Bishop Potter, New York Mrs. Clarence McCuaig, Sherbrooke | street, Montreal, entertained at tea on Saturday - afternoon for her ®on, Mr. Rvkert McCuaig. In Victoria, B:C., last week, a de lightful ball was given in the sail] loft of the Naval Yard, the room be- ing brilliantly lighted and decorated with bunting. The hosts were the cap tain and officers of H.M.S. Grafton, the flagship, and the ball was given in honor of Rear-Admiral Bickford. who was leaving the station for home. Supper was served at tables decorat-| ed with six-inch eartridge-cases hold ing chrysanthemums. "tee The Earl of Ronaldshea, eldest son | of the Marquis of «Zetland, and nep- hew and A.D.C. to Lord Curzon, is touring the world. At present he is the guest of their excellencies at Gov- ernment House, Ottawa. | Colonel Lee Knowles, M.P., has had a baronetcy conferred on him, among those who received the King's birth. day honors. Colonel Knowles will be remembered hy Torontonians and es- pecially Varsity men. He visited Tor- onto in the capacity of captain of i Oxford Cambridge athletes, who came to this continent to measure strength and endurance with the ath- iss Cartwright. (St. Hilda's) second vice-president; Miss Hunter. (Universi: ty Uollege), secretary; Miss Addison (Vii ia) treasurer, A paper on "lhe {al Residehce. was read by Miss Addison. ene Miss Cleary of London, Englavd, who has beem staying with Mrs. Phils ip Strathy, Toronto, left for Barrie in the carly part of last week, where she will be the guest of Mrs, H. 8S. Strathy again before returning hoime. Miss Frederica Strathy, who has been abroad for over two years, re- tuned last week, and is at present the guest of Mrs. Philip Strathy in Spadina avenue. . 3 . The Authors' Society, in Toronto, of which Geoldwiih Smith is president, will tender Mrs. Everard Cotes (Sara deanctte Dumean), a ion next week, a deserved tribute to our dis. tinguished authoress. A somewhat difficult task in needle work has just: been performed by an Englishwoman in the transferring and adapting to modern fashions a large quantity of gold cumbroidery, which has been a family heifloom for some 300 years. It was originally on a foundation of handmade net and is a splendid specimen of work. Some parts 'have been appliqued on a white crepe de chine Empire gown, others on white net, of which bands are to be laid on a mantle of cloth of gold, to be worn by a countess at one of the queen's drawing-rooms. A tablier pa nel and bands, for bertha and sleeves arc other uses to which the embroid- ery 'will be put.: The flat thread of which it is made is of twenty-four carat and shines as brilliantly to- day as if just made, This thread is one-eighth of an inch wide, in two distinct makes, one smooth and sparkling, the othet somewhat dulled by crinkling, hy which means . two bright but uneven surfaces are artisti- cally exposed to the subtle play of lights, With these fattened strands have been delineated a chrysanthemum pattern conventionally treated with long reversible passe stitch, rather ex- travagant, being alike in front and ate the back, hence it employs a deal of thread to beldly stand up and pro- duce without any padding a discreet relief. The elongated leaves, petals of | flowers, and raised dots recallin spangle, are wrought with the sparkl. ing strips in contrast with the basket stitch, filling the hearts of the blos- soms and forming the buds. or. Light -heartedness is a graceful qual- ity--a grace, perhaps, rather than - a quality--the only substitute for good fortune, the only impregnable shield against fate, the most generally pow- erful of all charms. Most of us began life equipped with this gift; is it too much to say that most of us have lost it ? Lightness of heart does not come of want of sympathy. A man who cannot feel the sorrow of his friends is usually well able to:com- plain of his ows. Children are light. hearted, not because they are incap- able of care, They have not enough experience to enable them to look for- ward. They do not yet believe that the thing - which has been is t which shall be. If they turn . their eyes away from the present they look into an imaginary werld, not into the future, that future in whose lap 'ties the salve for most sorrows, together with an inexhaustible supply of frosh fears. Among grown-up people light ness: of leart does not seer to have mush to do with circumstances, though it is commoner in some class. es than in others, » - ® . A London special says : Shyness is not generally regarded as a promin- ent characteristic of the modern wom an, but the distressing malady is, ap parently, sufficiently prevalent for it to be seriously taken in hand at the Uopling School of Art at Farl's 'ourt. There, during the coming sea- System Poisoned by Defective Kidneys. Results of the | Most Dreadfully Painful and Fatal Ailments Known to Man. DR. CHASE'S »statement which the' lesson demand y meeting has been held, and the. roseate blushes which suliused the cheeks of bashful blondes and brunettes rivalled nature's finest efiqrts in the shape of a tropical sun: set." Never, it is said, has Settuuens of London thn ieved. by such a. warm, glowing piece of : The lecturer at this meeting did not spare her quailing hearers as shé told them that shyness was merely a form of conceit," the result of believing are. The cure is to be effected hy means of a series of debates, in the course of which the disease will be considered in all its aspects. The shy- est. women will take the chair in turn, Papers will Iv read by the shyest and will 'be replied to by the next in or der of shyness. After a course of this treatment under blushing guardianship it is confident. ly expected that a blush will never again be seen in a London drawing room savé on a masculine cheek. A BELOVED MASTER, NE N-- A Joke of Which the Small Bey Wa i Thoroughly Ashamed. Dean Farrar, who was at one time head master of Marlborough College, had Bt one of his boys, who writ- es of him in Cofnhill, cells 'the manner."' Therefore, he was red and reverencéd, and somes tim gently smiled at. Often, in his teaching, his mind wandered to ether things while he mechanically ropeated the ed. It happened; too, that he some times forgot how often he had said a thing important ehough to. be ut- tered more than ounce. The boys noticed this, and were sometimes tempted to play upon his unsus- picious nature; but whenever any of them Jed him into the trap, they were always speedily sorry for it. During one term there were weekly lessons in the Septuagint, where the Greek words for "word" and "work™ are interchanged. Regularly every Monday morning the dean would ex- plain this confusion in the Words: "The reason why ergon is used here instead of logos is that it is a translation of the Hebrew word da~ bar, which means Both 'word' and 'thing.' *' The last monosyllables would come rolling out, in the grand manner, like the boom of a great bell One morning a light-minded boy whispered to another, 'We have mot had dabar yet. Shall I get it?" "Deo, if you dare.' "If you please, sir,' sald the mis chievous one, 'why is ergon used instead of logos, in the passage just translated?" "Ab," replied the master, "you could not be expected to know that. The reason is--" and forth rolled the usual explanation. To see the dean walk with stately tread into the open trap was not too small a joke to please a schoolboy. There was a moment of suj delight, but. succeeding that a re- morseful silence; and after the ses sion the boy-joker was begged by his fellows mever 'to repeat the jest. No schoolmaster was ever more sensitive to poor results than was this ome. At a certain history les- son, when a boy had failed to an- swer some trifling question, the master flung down his book and ex- claimed, "My dear boys! I am pro- foundly discouraged. For fifteen years of my life 1 have been lett down a bucket into an empty well, and drawing it up again. For fif- teen years of my life I have been pouring out water upon the arid sand." Then he gathered up bis books and fled. A few boys laughed. The others cried, 'Shame! shame!" on those who did it. And tho next lesson was splendidly prepared. en -- Henley's Library te Be Seld. The library of the late W. BE: Hen- ley will soon be sold. Many of its volumes have interesting autograph inscriptions. Apropos of Henley's books The London Morning Post tells this story: 'Mr. Henley once un- consciously illustrated one of his own arguments rather well. He had been talking of versions of poems by Burns, which were said to be final be- Of the food which is taken into the body, part is digested and assimilated sue, and a certain portion becomes the system. Much of such matter is cast out or excreted by the kidneys in liquid form and passes from these or- gans through the ureters to the blad: der. When the kidneys become deranged this liquid poison forms into solid ma- terial, sometimes collecting in the joints and causing rheumatism, at other times in the kidneys, ureters or bladder, and becoming what is known as gravel or stone in the bladder, Jrobably the most torturing and most atal ailment. known to mankind. Don't wait for symptoms of these horrible diseases, don't weit for Pright's disease, diabetes, dropsy or apoplexy before beginning the use of Dr. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills, but ing from the first symptoms, such as headaches, deposits in urine, loss of flesh, and any irregularities of urinary organs i Mrs. W. Francie, 204 Colborne street, Kingston, Ont., states : "lI was in a very bad state with kidney disease in its worst form. | felt miserable most of the time, suffer ed from pains in the legs and as 1 letes of Varisty and" MeGill and Har- { vard and Yakgr '° | The Countess of Aberdeen, when re. | | cently opening a bazaar in Edinburgh | | wiven by the Scottish Children's | { League, wore a gown of moss green | taffeta. Lady Marjorie Gordon. who { accompanied her mother, was in gree | | canvas, with a red belt and a touch | | of red in her hat. . - . . | A number of women graduates met | in the common room at: St. Hilda's | | on Friday, and formed & federated ! club, representing all the colleges. The | officers will be, Miss Chown (Vie- ident: MacMurchy saw that I was gradually failing in health and becoming thinner and weak- er | worried a great deal about the future. 1 had tried a great many kidney medicines, but did not obtain much benefit. A friend of mine asked why I did not try Dr. Chase's' Eidney- Liver Pills. I did so and can truly sav that they have entirely cured me. would not think of being without this remedy in the hoose now as we con- sider it a splendid family medicine." Dr. Chase's, Ki ind¥ Live Pills, one pill » dose, 25. of Edmanson, Bates & Co., Toronto. Té protect you against imitations the Chese, famous Ls A. the are on | poet and given to his friends long af- Kidney-Liver Pills | and goes to form mew blood and tis | { aln. } waste matter which is poisonous to! | prevent these results hy taking warn: | the | Ti Great Britain a box, at all dealers, | fect of 14 & shows that ( au | 24a is a a aoe r cause they had been written by the ter they had been published in his books. 'You know,' he said to ene | of the company who sometimes wrote | verses, 'that if you are suddenly ask- ed to make a copy of a poem you did and finished with years ago you are quite likely 'to include ous or two things that were in the original version, but were afterward tered. You never can remember exactly.' Later in the afternoon--it was at Muswell Hill, in the house that faced the scene of the famous murder--a man | produced a first edition of the 'Book | of Verses," published by Mr. David | Nutt in 1888, and asked Mr. Henley | to copy on the fly leal the poem, | 'Bring her again, O western wind,' | which has so often been set to music. | He consented, broke down in the | first verse, and had to consult the | text. When he had finished the task | his friend complained that the sixth | line of the eight which make the poem | was altogethes spoiled by the chang- | ing of a single word. Somebody was there who had seen the poem bhe- | fore anybody save its author, and was able to explain, 'That was how it was ir the first version.' Mr. Hen- | ley had made exactly the slip which ! he had suggested Burns might have made sometimes fn similar circume | stances.' i S-------- ! Wide-Awake Canada. | | Canada is not hiding its light un- | der a bushel, but boasts that its for- eign trade last year was $35.50 per head of population, while ours was { put $18 per head. Looking to fin- | crease of exports, the Canadians | boast that their exports increased 99 | per cent., against 83 per cent. for the United States, and 13 per cent. { for Great Pritain. The exports to in 1902 were worth £100,847,000, against $43,223,000 to the United States. Imports from Great Britain were $49,206,000, against $120,814,000 from the Unit- ed States. The purchase hy the Ca- nadian Pacific of an Elder-Defapster } themselves greater than they really | Miss Desterre's un-| H. Jennings, ASK FOR THE OCTAGON BAR Sunlight Soap. washes the clothes white and won't hurt the Aands. 7 LEVER BROTHERS LIMITED, "TORONTO, * m5 Made of the best leather obtainable, light or heavy soles. ! MEN'S--$1.50, $1.75, $2 and $225 = BOYS'--$1 25, $1 50 and $1.75. 8 YOUTHS --§$1.25. ; LADIES' SKATING BOOTS:$1,50 SKATES PUT ON FREE. KINGSTON wpm QO09Y VOIDEN IOS +®. PARKER & C "STOCK AND SHARE 'Buy and sell South African, ® Australian and Canadian Mining Shares, : and British Railway and odusteial Shares, : ® Options handled SE Rallway, Industrial and Mining Shares." T0000 239 990099096 LORD SALISBURY, THE BELIEVER. Letter Stating Mis lieusons for the Falth That Vas ln Him, The London Necord contains the following very interesting letter, ad- dressed by Lord Salisbury .to the Rev. W. T. McCormick, at that time Vicar of St. Matthew's, Brighton: "Chhlet Cecil, Puys, Dieppe, ""August 30th, 1804, "Rev, Sir,--I wish I could assist you; but it is difficult to touch , so large a theme ir so short a space without doing harm, "Everyone has their own point of view from which they look at these things. To me the central point is the Resurrection of Christ, which I : believe. PIA we tr "Firstly, because it is testified hy & Woek. Send me your address and men who had every opportunity of rarprise you with a proposition. seeing and knowing, and whose ver- DDE acity was tested by the most tre Ww. W. LINSCOTT, mendous trials, both of energy. -and Port nie endurance, during long lives, "Secondly, because of the marvel ous eflect it had upon the world. As a moral phenomenon, the spread and mastery of Christianity is without a parallel. 1 can no more believe that colossal moral effects lasting for 2,000 years canibe without a cause, than I can believe that the various Ttotions of the magnet are without a cause, though I cannot wholly ex- plain them. . "To anyone who believes the Hes- urrection of Christ, the rest presents little difficulty. No one who has that belief will doubt ' that those who were commissioned by Him to speak ~Paul, Peter, Mark, John--carried a Divine message. St. Matthew falls into the same category. St. Luke has the warrant of the genoration of Christians who saw and heard the others. We carry the larg and most select line of | ' OVERCOATINGS in the city. or. : "Inspection Invited. Crawford & Wal "That is the barest and roughest Leadig Tailors, Princess & Dagot Sts, form the line which the evidence of ' : - the inspiration of the New Testa- sr ment has always taken in my mind. : 4 But intellectual arguments, as you well know, are not. to be relied upon in such matters--Believe me, yours faithfully, "SALISBURY. "The Rev. W. T, McCormick." ee ------------------ 4 An Advantage of Khaki. One definite advantage in substi. tuting khaki for blue cloth uniforms for the army in the tropies and in summer was not considered when the change was discussed in the War Des partment, the anopheles mosquito not having at that time been ex- haustively studied. The ' malaria breeding inosquitoes will not light upon substances having a yellow col or, but swarm about blue fabrics. | age avoid harsh ative pills. oko yoy sick and then dver

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