Daily British Whig (1850), 30 Apr 1906, p. 6

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RRA SEX SR , EE Bh pinn A iy Ate rivals a5 ta which siiould be the metropolis of the new mining district. Does either town possess the natural advantages i 'BURY AND COBALT necessary to become' the large city sure to spring up in that District? A large city is bound to be built, not on account of the tee ---- : mining alone, but owing to the large lumber industry and other natural advantages, and a phenomenal growth will result. Ve Do Not Dispute the Claims of Either Town, But Ask You To Examine North LE ed ae Cobalt for Yourself, and Then Choose. a A clean, naturally drained townsite must be healthy, and that is what we have. We offer you lots 33 x 125 feet at your price, as they will be sold without reserve. Look it up and you will invest. A clear title deed goes with every lot without expense to SALE WILL BE HELD IN COBALT MAY 3rd, 7 p.m., MAY . Ath, 1 a.m. and 7 p.m., and ['1AY 5th, 11 a.m, sale will be continued in Toronto at Henderson's Auction Room, 89 King Street East, May 7th and 8th, 8 p.m. Van Every's Special Excursion will leave Toronto 11. 30 p.m,, 2nd, reaching Cobalt in time for the first sale, and returns to Toronto May 6th, 7 am. Fare for round trip, $25.00, including sleeper both ways and during stay at Cobalt. For , inquire VAN EVERY'S, King Edward Hotel, or ~~ : 'he North Cobalt L.and Corporation, Limited = 16 King Street West, Toronto ; ER ES Ee ne ws be -' fire has come!" To protect the priest without hope.« Without the law of God, | with its rows on rows of flat white tab- ' : ---- the Turkish soldiers are obliged to these religions cannot nourish the soul | lets, bearing only name, date of birth = Wood's Phosphodins, Week and Easter | drive back the Jeople with the butts of nor satisfy the mind, therefore they are | and death of the departed -- the breth- iB) Cn ns ath eh nies '| their guns, while the police keep them doomed. Christianity is not a religion; | ren on one side and the sisters on the nervous syste, Inakes pew in order with the lash. The only per- it is the religion. It is not going to | other. They are also separated into Doi Blood in old Veins. « vs Nery sons who remain calm are the governor | siiare the world with Islamism, Shinto- | groups in accordance with their station | $9 Feduity, "one: ne batty" oo of Jerusalem and his Jriseipal officers, | ism, Buddhism, Confucianism; it is des- | in life,--married women, married men, | matorrhea, and Effects of Abuse or Exrcesses. who, seated on a raised dais, survey the six t | tined to prevail from the rivers even un- | single women, single men, widows, wid- Priva $l per Jot. fords One Nill pleas i scene with true Turkish imperturbabili- i to the ends of the earth. ower, young girls and young boys. hb mg ls Bp Ri a Bil ty. | eee The trombone choir is one of the in- | mailed fre: The Wood Medicine Co. ! MORAVIAN EASTER. stitutions of the Moravian Church. It | Gormerly Windsor) Toronto, Ont. : : ----e is heard on many occasions, and: never { = Fre ie ram) oq Euniversary, April x. v | Quaint Ceremonies in a Penn- | more impressively than when announc- THE FRONTENAC open to Christians o t. George, the patron saint of Eng- i ing from the church steeple the "home- but attached to its sides are a land, was born at Lydda, but brought { y sylvania Town. _ | going" of one of the members of the LOAN & INVESTMENT SOCIETY. t of churches, cha and {up in Ca ocia. He was a tribune in | Whether in the quaint old town of | "eo jon" Three hymns are giv- ESTABLIShED 1863 {ur ap) A 4 1 1 x congregation. Three hymn gl . aging to different creeds, in | the reign of Diocletian, and being -of Herrnhut (birthplace of the Moraviam{ en, the middle 'one indicating the age | President--Sir Richard Cartwright en "ho- | great courage, was a favourite, but as | Church in Germany) or in the Mora- | and condition in life of the departed. As Money loaned on City and F ful au- | he complained to the emperor of his | and vian settlements in America, of which Bethlehgm, Pa. is the oldest and best { known, "the celebration of the Easter- tide is beautiful and impressive, and alike the world over, Several hours be- fore the break of day the 'trombone choir, starting from tt through the street each class has its own appropriate hymn, | perties. Muuicipal ( 1 he "contrrecation" o } tires. Mortgages mp the members of the "congregation" have | LI. HOranes = But only to listen to know which class § § "6 "McGill, Managing Director. the departed belonged to. The Mora- Office, 97 Clarence street. Kinusto vians never Sf of the departure of their loved one "death", but rather he church, marches | 35 the "home-going" T hey think of it, Auction Sales awakening the | indeed, as the entrance into a more severities toward the Christians and ar- gued in their defence he was po in rison and beheaded April 23rd, 302. & Jerome mentions him in one of his is covered with votive | Martyrologies, and in the following vases and images. Inside is the | century were many churches named to a marble slab about | his honor. Ashmole in his "History of the chamber containing the Order of the Garter," says that] | sleepers with an Easter matin. Soon | plessed and joyous life, and it not a ok your sale, St Fursiiure at oes that only four or five | King Arthur in the sixth century [« | forms of hurrying people fill the streets, | right to wear the outward ms of 1 conduct all the important sales and al to kneel before the | placed the Bleture of BE Segre on his | all hastening towards the church. Af-| mourning and fo grieve too sorely over snlive the hichest prices e. banners, and Selden tells us that he was {ter a brief service, an anthem by the e JOSS 0 ir beloved. i one, 065. celebrates Easter in a dif- | patron saint of England in Saxon times, | choir, a short litany and one or two the loss of their bel JOHN H. MILLS ly curious cere- Br is certain that the Councl of Ox- i hymns, -- the procession is formed, the The Leading Auctioneer ed. of the most | ford in 1222 commanded his festival clergy preceded by the choir, and all True Faith's Real Use. is known as the "adoration |to be observed in England as a holiday : march to the cemetery, every eye f lump of the scourging," tel turned toward the cast to catch the first 3 4 A ere a Beher pillar of red granite, believed | Ao be the very pillar to which our ond | of lesser rank, and in 1330 he was ad- opted as the patron of the Order of the Garter. he dragon slain by St George is simply a common allegory to was scourged, express the triumph of the Christian on the altar for the edification | hero over evil which St. John pictured. faithful. Among thé eastern | Gibbon, in his "Decline and Fall" as- P ly the Russians, this | serts that the atggn saint of England d in great veneration, as | was George oF Cappadocia, the turbu- once a year, on Holy | jent Bishop of : Alexandria, but this NEW YORK Restaurant 83 Princess Street Open from 10.30 a.m. to 3.00 am _The best place to get an all round Lunch in the city. Meals of all kif ds on shortest notice. Fnglsk and Chinese dishes a specialtv. glimpse of the rising sun. The clergy take places in the centre of the burial ground, close to an open grave, -- fit symbol of the resurrection. Behind them stand the trumpeters. After a moment's hush under the reddening sky, the bishop offers prayer and the choir I sings, "The Graves of all His Saints | Christ Blessed." As the sun clears the , the crowd to Hew it is me has been disproved by Papebroch, Mil- 'SI AHMED EL BEN 2 2Z, eastern hilltops the assembled 'throng New Monumental Works a foremost Jugsling and fight- Wer and othels. The young heir to the throné¢ of Morocco, is not in thd least tokees 2 the Tova: J Lettering in Cemeteries whode duty it is to keep or- England worried by the complications whi ch have arisen concerning the re- ef he fant ow Zr umbet sound y : : sol the th long The Bells Of BARC. lations between Morocco and Fra nce which canje very near pre- And let our kindred rise; a Specialty : : JAS. MULLEN, 872 Princess St. Opposite Y.M.C.A ] r . + Awake! ve i der © on men and women alike, ~The | The metal tongue of the big bell rings | cipitating hostilities between Fra nce and Germ any. His ohief |<W2ke! ye ngtions under ground a az i 3 : Ye saints, ascend the shies." washing is performed | out many changes tp our modern ears. | op ugement is to ride around the neighborhood of Tangier on his ' Roman Catholics and | It s of disaster and death, of re- joicing and devotion. In England it A ofttn tells of old times and quaint cus- | "F--=--== : i Following are responsiv dings, 1 . g ponsive rea 10S y ittle donkey, accompanied by sev eral trusty servants prayer and hymns, and the apostolic EE : : k { ------ grace Although later in the morning TE tgme._ Mr. Ditchiied, in a book on old| THEY ARE FAILURES. gvety night hungry in body. It is be- | Win icniia musical aceompamment . Headquarters. 3 tr 5 jeved to have been an understatement, | 1: re an ig ; Handed Jo on, though Ye, ininabula The Non-Christian Religious Are and sociologists Accept ®t But sadder Te hi forth a For Real Estate and Insurance . than that, there will lie down to-night ||: imi " evoti $1 be ha 8 In some parts of the country the bell | Inadequate. 1,000,000,000 of people without God -- | Ug" nd the simple rever et | devotion co St. Opp. Post Oca TOI Lads Basing Bele Ign din Jo. R, Mott. without Jesus Christ -- and without HIS 0 nis cure as pers #5 Clarence St. SPP: . Lot. : : haps no other could do. u The need is indescri i these the soul is not fed. Think of!" : : : : England the bells poi merrily on Oak Anglo Saxon world Seribable ch those people living in darkness, steeped The Raster celebration n this Ba chro | Apple Day hig ebraty the whi tim worker for every hundred people; in idolatry and J oerstition, living -un- Ee x Boscabel, in South Amnierics ¢ td over 38 1 jder a burden of sin and 'sorrow, of |2 VE atian isl pi bell, rung 'at the beginning of Lent, is ¥: ati 'afe cs ES nie opno. In shame and gloom, as they pass on to me! congregation" enter into close sym- : p as "Pancake Bell," because, im} 8 0 every individual Christian. Ini [the tomb. They do not have the po- | PAU and fellowship with their Lord In pn confirmation sermon &t St. old time phrase, it "summons opie Cliina are nine hundred walled cities, | wer of Tesistance that we possess as | 0, His sufferings and death. The most | Mark's, New York, Bishop Greer chal- 331 King Street m and a pRISEies 15 Set with a poptilation of ten millions, as yet |the result of Christian environment and od Fraday. i moos oat of Chee, ag that Tic oe on Open from 10.30 a.m. to 300 al a . without a missi . ina he hereditary Christian ideals. - They are | 00% Friday. As - | Christian away from the world. "On{ |, lace to get an all A Tively peal of bells is often rung at | 5 id Rp et has ony fighting a losing bagtle. Without Christ, | Cifixion approaches a great hush . falls the contrary, true faith takes us into the on og city. Meals of all kinds cn the end of the Sunday morning Jervice, people. 'Taking every letter in the bible |1he¥ are without hope. Men have | PO! the assembled worshipers and all world, It is that faith in God which, shortest - notice. English and Chinese and is called "Pudding Bell" Perhaps | repfesent a human soul,' it would Jasked, "are not the non-Christian - re= heads hs bowed in silent prayer. At | while it would be lost in commercial and | jighes a specialty. Phone 655. {its purpose is to announce to the stay | ype Cicer nie pikes to equal the. pop- | ligions ndequate to bring them home?" fires o'clock the Hell begins to toll and | business life, and would, perhaps, be not at-homes that service is over and thati y)iion of the world, and of this only a |] Used to think so. T honestly believed | the. low sweet bs of the: choir pray | seen upon the surface, would neverthe- A {ioneer may come out of the oven. | rite niore than the letters in the Book jthat these non-Christian religions had Te Song iat Godawill have mercy for | fess dignify and purify that life. It Wm. Murray, uc very night at five minutes past nine | ¢'re in would be equal to the num- | SA¥Ing power, but having studied these | SUS sake, and, that "none may ever | would not remove our pleasures, but it . 8 Tom," the great bell of Christ | per of Protestant Christians, "There ore | religions at first hand, I have been dis- Jose fhe comforts of the Saviour's death. | would take out of them. the coarseness 27 BROCK ST. mrch College at Oxford, booms out | ti hundred millions of Hindus and [ilusionized. These religions are losing | Lhe Moravia Church is one of old | sometimes in them. It would not shut its derous note of 101 times. This sixty millions of Mohammedans= in In- |8round; judging 'them by the only geisting Protestant bodies, having been | the theatres, but it would keep vulgar | "New Carriages Cutters, Harness, particular riumber was chosen in accord- | gia * How little statistics can explain | Proof that Jesus Christ has given us, by | founded in 1457 in Germanv. Three | ity out of them. It: would not prevent Te ance the number of students at the | ye' depth of need. In the Levant, where | their fruits, they are a ghastly failure. Sentanes later Count Zinzendorf, plan- | us from talking about our neighbors, etc,, for sale. i of the college. Crist" worked, and His disciples labor- | 10 Asia, Africa, and in Australasia as |i Toe frst mission in America, and | but it would tinge such talk with a mes: : 2 J . ed for so long, there is oniy one Chris | Visited many monasteries, shrines, and | the plonecrs of, the new world settle- | sage of courtesy, kindness and charity, Sale of Horses Every Satur The Bishop of Newcastle charges | tian worker to 100,000 people. In Af. |temples, as I talked with priests and PAT ees ful Letigh Valley. and take out. the Sting .of idle gossip i is spent in England on foot- \riga, a vast section. including the Sou. | Native students, ang: the devotees ~ of | felled fhe first trees and built the first s. Geo. Cliff. Specialist (anadian (Chinese Restaurant It would help men and women to _#void foreign 'dan; with a lation of sixty to nine. these religions, as I beheld the injust- log hut in the winter of 1740. The fol- things they ought to avoid." "ee Shae of oy ay appro- {ty millions, 1s left with only a few |1c0% the - cruclties, the abominations | IOWINg year Zinzendorf came over to me Try Myers' "Home: ay - called brand new. scores. of Protestant . missionaries. Jpracticed by their adherents, deeper and | ¥isit the settlement and to celebrate 1d : ® nd mtn bourse | SE So ria Coes ph toons Ho Wet A wm cw ee ma | py Br eg og a : wi t Jesus Christ these nations are |! a 9 € mast interesting | when she is conversing with her hus- : : two hundred millions of people lie down J places in Bethlehem is the old cemetery, | band. : : 2 3 made from care selected veal, eggs savoury herbs and perfectly cooked -- appetizing--can be | thin as wafers for wiches. WM. CLARK, M MONTREAL. 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