Daily British Whig (1850), 24 Apr 1909, p. 15

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. One Tt nial than brot N.B., BROTHER: T0LD BROTHER Suffered for Fifteen, Years, the Otuer for Thirteen. 16 convincing powers of a testimo- were never more clearly shown in the case of Mr. Hugh Brown. A her, Lemuel Brown, of Avondale, rad in the paper about Hon, John Costigan being cured by "Fruit- a-tjves." only pure Fruit-a.tives,' Knowing the Senator would endorse a medicine which ha d him, Mr. Lemuel Brown They cured him Ohroni¢ Indigestion and Constipation so he urged his brother to, try them, "Three doctors told me that 1 had Liver Disease and Trouble. My stomach was very weak. 3 te years and grew Hartland, N.B, Oct. 28th, 1907. serious Stoma their medicines for thirteen 'worse, My ok (who was cured of terrible Indigestion by won dozen boxes and have slxtl without distress prov also Fruit-a-tives" after suffering fi bought hulf just finished! the I eat all kinds of he arty foods and am 1 way "Fruit Chronic Constiy derful tablets I n, ed fn every cured the which was so distressing in my ¢ 50c a box, 6 for $I At dealers or from Fruit-a-tives, 25¢. Lim HUGH BROW? a (Signed) ited, Ottawa. TO MIS MAJESTY THE KING SirJohn Power & Son Ltd.} fm IRISH WHISKEY | ESTABLISHED AD. vel. Famous for over a century for its delicacy of flavor. ~ Of highest standard of Purity. It is especially recommended by tho Medical Profession on account of its peculiar "DRYNESS" add of h brother 1d 15 years), recommended me to try these a trial box, EPP ossibly have S'S You cannot a better A delicious drink and a sustaining food. economical, Fragrant, nutritious and This excellent Cocoa maintains the system in robust health, and enables it to resist winter's extreme cold. COCOA B1ld by Grocers and Storekeepers " Mavrore c a colors are fast aud britliant i . in }-1b. and }+ib Tins. Zap That Dyes! !t--that's the name of the ake of sua p that makes successful dyeing t home cleanly, successful, safe. The It dyes to shade. No streaks, No mess or le trouble. Give yourself a a¥po real pleasant treat with Soap cleanly * Maypole "1 roc, for colors. isc, for black, Frank I. Pewedict & Ce, Monsveal. 67 Wante wh tein At ou have 'Qity prop resent WIE large WANT ;-- house centrally located, dwel ling, (8 or 4 bedrooms) suitable for boarding house. 1. 3. A small modern brick A good sized or 2 000 4. A medium frame $1,500. 5. 000. 6. " 7. A small A double dwelling under $3,000 Three, four or five terest on the tuvestmoeunt. T. Real Estate & Insurance, 159 ig J. Lockhart, St., Kingston. te for eale list us as we cannot supply the de- mands of our clients, located, and well dtane frame dwelling under dwelling under frame dwelling under $t.- tenement dwel- lings that would yicldva fair tate of in- T™ IT STANDS IN THE HEART OF THE DESERT OF SINAL > = Once the Only Christian Stronghold in Arabia ~The Church of the Transfiguration Is an Early Christian Basilica Across a Waterless Desert. Christian Herald. In the heart of the desert of Sinai stands the stately convent" of St. Catharine, sur- roynded by massive walls, with rows of galler- ies, of hospitable guest-chambers, of cells, library of anciedt manuscripts, beautiful church, the banner of the cross floating high upon its topmost towers. Thus, with few and scarcely noticed changes, it has stood for centuries. Its history is difficult to trace. If we accept legends and traditions it was built by the Emperor Justinian 523 A.D. He erected | the strong outer walls of granite, oyer twenty- five feet high, and formed the irregular square inclosure. This he did because .the hermits of Mount Sinai "when they heard that he de- lighted to build churches and found convents, made a journey to him, complaining how the wandering sons of Ishmael were wont to at- tack them suddenly, eat up their provisions, desolate the place, enter the cells, and carry off everything; how that also they Broke into the church and devoured even the holy wafers." And so the place was fortified, and cannon frowned upon the valley below, ins uring 'pro- tection to the religious devotees, who, in con- sequence, flocked thither in considerable num- bers. The monastery grew and flourished. Its four hundred inmates, with patience and industry, transformed the granite sides of the mountain into well-ordered gardens and orch- ards. * Princes and kihgs visited it, and en- dowed it with fields and wealth. A r'chly decorated church was erected and called the Church: of the Transfiguration. The fresh and more virile faith of Islam challenged the Sinaitic tribes to battle, It swept bare the adjacent land and carried away its inhabitants captive. But this wave of ¢on- quest did not interfere with the monks on Sinai. For centuries the Convent of St. Catharine, until a few years ago, stood as it Fad done for a thousand years, the only Chris- tian stronghold in the whole of Arabia. To this time the monks have remained undis- turbed. Their numbers have dwindled to fif- teen or twenty, but otherwise the inner con- stitution and the outer governmen' of the monastery are in no way different from a thousand years ago. The church and the mosque stand peaceably side by side; behind them rises up the "Mount of the Law," in whose shadow they stand. The chief treasure of the place, bringing its present-day fame, is the library, which con- tains about 1,000 manuscripts, in Greek and Latin, besides many in Syriac, Ethiopic, Per- sian, Gregorian, Slavonic and Russian. Here, in 1844, was discovered by Professor Tischen- dorf the famous Codex Sinaiticus, a Greek manuscript of the Bible, dating from 400 A.D., and surpassed by the Codex Vaticanus alone in age and authority. It was purchased by Alexander II. of Russia and is in St. Peters- burg. The story of this find is a romance in itself. Thrown into a waste-basket, designed! for the fire, it was rescued from this fate only to be sccurely locked away by the monks. Forty pages, however, were at this time taken away. Negotiations carried on for two years ended in failure. Only when the assistance of the Czar of Russia had been enlisted and a royal edict given did the monks admit schélars into the hbrary or allow the use of the manu- script. The Church of the Transfiguration is an carly Christian basilica. From the ceiling hang a hundred antique lamps of silver and beaten brass, all different in size and shape; some are ornamented with ostrich eggs, others with - silver doves, joining their wings in a circle and carrying the lights on their heads. The upper part of the apse is filled with mosaics of great beauty and value, quisite 'workmanship and delicacy of finish. 3y far the most holy thing in the church is the "Chapel of the Burning Bush," to enter which one is required to take off his shoes, "for the ground on which he stands is holy." The room is ten feet square. Against one wall is a little altar. Three silver lamps, al- ways burning, hang inside, and a plate of solid silver is let into the floor below, to mark the site of the burning bush. was a gift from the Emperor of Russia. monks are under strict monastic orders: eat no meat nor. other rich food; is bread and water, in the convent garden, ® The They their fare camels, to. visit the place, yet no one has ever returned sorry that he had gone. EASTERTIDE. Margaret E. Sangster. Oh. rare as the splendor of lilies, And sweet as the violet's breath, , Comes the jubilant morning of Easter, A triumph of life over death, For fresh from the earth's quickened hosom Full 'baskets of flowers we bring, And scatter their satin-soft petals To carpet the path for our King. In the countless green blades of the meadow, The sheen of the dafiodil's gold, In the tremulous blue of the mountains, The opaline mist of the wold, In the tinkle of brooks through the pasture, The river's strong sweep to the sea, Are signs of the day that is hasting In gladness to you and to me. ---- So down in their splendor of lilies, Thy fluttering violet breath, Oh, jubilant morning of Easter, Thy triumph of life over death! For fresh from the earth's quickéened bosom Full baskets of flowers we bring, And scatter their satin-soft petals To carpet a path for our King Disgrace To College Standards. The students of Ruskin College, Oxford, no- | minees of the labor unions, have been on strike for over a week. They resent the dis- missal of Principal Dennis Hird, as due to the! socialistic nature of his teachings and not to his inability to' maintain discipline as given | out. The strike was conducted on strictly | union methods. The professors are boycotted | and the grounds picketed against any attempt | of Mr. Hird's successor to take charge. Trend Is Toward Truth. Goldwin Smith. Since intolerance, gathering up its skirts, | from ex-| This silver star | CONVENT OF ST. CATHARINE|, HAS A VENERABLE TREASURE. A Bible of 1599 Ts in Possession of a Can- adian. March 27th--To the Editor: I was inter- ested to read in a- March number about the old "Breeches Bible." I have an older one in my possession which came to me from my mother's family. It was printed in 1599. The { title page of the Old Testament is missing. The title page of the New Testament reads: "The New Testament of our Lord Jesus Christ, translated out of Greek by Theod. Beza: With brief summaries and expositions upon the hard places by the said author, Jpai. Camer, and P. Loseler Villerius. Englished by L. Tomson; together with the annotations of Fr. Iunnius upon the Revelation of St. John. Imprinted at London by the Deputies of Christopher Barker, printer to the Queenes 'Most Excellent Majesty, 1599. It has also bound with it, and 1 think print: ed along with it: The Booke of Psalms, col- lected into English Meeter, by Thomas Sterne- hold, John Hopkins, and others: conferred with the Hebrew, with apt notes to sing them" withall.--Set forth 'und allowed to be sung in all churches, of the people together, before and after Morning and Evening Prayer; As also before and after Sermon; and moreover in private houses, for their godly solace and comfort, laying apart all ungodly songs and ballads which tend only to the nourishment of vice and cerrupting of youth." Then, to quaint old diamond-headed notes, we have not only the Psalms 'in metre, but also the Confession, the Lord's Prayer, the Te Deum, the Canticles, the Apostle's Creed, the Athanasian Creed, the Ten Commandments and a long thanksgiving after the receiving of the Lord's Supper, are all rendered into halting rhymes, and sung to quaint tunes.-- tA, HL. R (From the Ten Commandments.) "Hark! rad and what I say, give heed to understand I am the Lord thy God that brought thee out of Egypt land Even from the house wherein thou didst in thraldom live a slave None Ser Gods at all before my presence shalt thou A Dre from the Thanksgiving ofter the Lord's Supper.) And as the grapes in pleasant time are pressed very sore; And plucked downe when they Le ripe and let to grow no more, Because the juice that in them is, as comfortable drink; We might receive and joyfull be when sorrows make us rinke, So Christ his blood outpressed was, with nailes' and eke with speare, The juice whereof doth him feare. (A Verse from Pscim 104.) So as the great sea, Which large is, and broad, Where things that creepe swarme, nd beasts of each sort. Here both mightie hit saile, And some lie at road, The whale, huge and monstrous, ere also doth sport. save al! those that rightly doe A VERSE FROM THE TE DEUM. # Sternhold & Hopkins. When Thou hadst overcome of death the sharpe and cruell might, Thou heaven's rs dome didst set ope to each believing ight. In sory" of the Father Thou doest sit on God's right We ar that Thou shalt come cur Judge our cause to understand. (From the What man soeyer he be that, The Catholike beliefe he must, Which faith unless he holy keepe Without all doubt eternally he shall be sure to (This verse is a gem.) And yet though we believe that each of these eternal be; Yet there but one eternall is, and not eternalls three. As ne incomprehensible ne yet uncreate three, But one incomprehensible one uncreate hold to be. "Creede of Athanasius") salvation will attaine, hefore all things retaine; and undefiledly; re. Death Of A Good Friend. A good man has fallen, the leader for forty years of a large branch of humane work in America, attaining the greatest success. and organization known to. that class of work. It would be difficult to measure the benefi- cence wrought directly and indirectly by George Thorndike Angell, 'of Boston. "The weak and the helpless, the suffering and the oppressed of all the creatures of God had in him a devoted friend and yaliant defender. The work he established is one of the world- wide agencies of mercy and good will. It has promoted a tenderer regard for dumb animals; it has advanced the.cause of the brotherhood of man; best of all, it has sown the seed of human kindness in the hearts of millions of children to be felt and followed in years to come. It is the essence of love to give where it cannot receive, and he wio devoted his long, brave years to those who could not return his devotion, who could not cven know that he lavished it upon them, chose well. There are plenty of people to serve people; there are, alas, few to ¢erve dumb creatures. The fash- ionable philanthropies centre about" human sufferers--and every one of them is needed--| but these unfashionable, uphill, hard struggles to reduce the miseries of animal life because along with fruit grown it is the most helpless fort Few care to travel for | pe ranked among the hi istories of which the a week or"more across a waterless desert on| world is not worthy. | { | | sat at the dinner table and babbled dranken | foolishness. | of his friend, he reported evéry word the lat- | ter uttered. | cago. Iw 3 n% | X," may revolutionize surgery. | person sits down to consider the highest pos- ito eliminate from his "habits the use of liquor. 1 of life, deserve to The Crime Of Indulgence. Not viciousness, but thoughtlessness and uncontrolled self-indulgence, are responsible for most use of strong drink. Whenever a sible use of his powers, he is inevitably bound He finds the best scientists in agreement that strong drink impairs man's highest faculties. The twentieth century-is not-satisfied to toler- ate anything that hinders the fullest develop- ment of mankind. That he may make more of himself and of his children, and of his children's children, a man must repudiate what- ever hurts or hinders his capacity. Man is not man at hi{ best when in the grip of-the habit of strong drink. The story is told of a rich young man who One of his associates was a court stenographer. Seized by an idea for the help The next day these transcribed were sent to. the. man himself The latter, shocked, could scarcely believe that he had descended. to such a®level of imbecility. "HH this is the way a man talks when he is drunk, I mean to keep sober hereafter." Radium No Longer King. One of the most important discoveries in medical sciénce has been made by Dr. E. Still- man Bailey, of the Hahnemann College, Chi- The discovery, called the "Thor-rad- It comes from pitchblende--the source of radium. It has all the curative effects of radium without its HRDOO V5, NORAHNEDAS TROUBLE BETWEEN THESE TWO | PEOPLES IN CALCUTTA. It Arcse Over a Police Order Forbidding Mo- hammedans to Sacrifice Cows--Other Re- ligious Notes of World-Wide Interest. The trouble between Hindoos and Moham- medans in Calcutta. and in its neighborhood arose from a police order which, in deference to Hindoo feeling, forbade the Mohammedans to sacrifice cows. A recent illustration shows one resting in a Calcutta street, stopping all traffic untilsit pleases to rise. The cow is held sacred And in' such reverence, that wherever it chooses to rest, there it is allowed to stay. "An officer desires to return thanks to Almighty God for his perfect recovery from a severe wound, and also for the many mercies bestowed upon him. 8 Dec, 1797. For next Sunday." The paper with these words, the first written by Nel- son with his left hand, sold at Sotheby's, London, for $580, part of the Victory's sails and a piece | of the canopy of Nelson's funeral barge being in- cluded in the lot. While it is customary to credit Hippocrates, the Greek physician, with being the father of medi- cine, discoveries of recent years have revealed that the healing art flourished in far earlier times than recorded in the history of Greece. Phy- sicians were plentiful in the Egypt of 1500'B. C,, and a medical college existed in Borsippa, a suburb of Babylon, even before the latter date. The school superintendent, says a recent writer, ought to have "the learning of a col- lege president, the wisdom of a judge, the exe- cutive talents of a financier, the patience of a church janitor, the humility of a deacon, and the craftiness of a politician," It is rather-a large order, but there are several thousand men in this country trying to fill it. | The ikons in the cathedral of the Assump- tion in the Kremlin, at. Moscow, are immensely valuable. They yielded about five tons of silver and five hundredweight of gold to the French soldiery in 1812, but this treasure was recovered by the Cossacks, who, in their grati- tude, presented to the cathedral a silver chan- del'er weighing 900 pounds. It is reported of Rev. J. R. N. Bell; D.D,, Presbyterian, Corvallis, Oregon, that he has advanced further in fraternal orders-than any other minister in the world, having ridden the goat in secret orders 161 times. He has mis- taken his calling not a church. ley : . | Fourteen distinguished Americans who hold honorary degrees from Oxford tried to make | All they | up a gift for the English university. could raise was a thousand dollars. This simply proves that Oxford honored the right | kind of American--him whose wealth is in his | head. In 1908 fully 450 converts were added 'to organized Christianity in the foreign mission | fields for every day. It took a century of | mission work to win the first million of peo- ple, but the present rate we are winning | them. at about one-sixth of a 'million a year. Rhodes, the city of the colossus, still sur- vives,--a medieval: city in its defensive wan gear of tower and curtain and keep. It is the city the Knights of St. John erected in the midst of the Byzantines, after being driven out of Jerusalem in the fourteenth century. It is called St. John's church. The boy had been there frequently, and the rector's face had become familiar to 'him. One Sunday, a visiting clergyman occupied the pulpit, and the boy was troubled. "Mamma," he said in a whisper, "what's become of 'Saint John'?" None of many memorials in Westminster Ab- bey gives a nobler thought than the life lesson from the monument to Lord Lawrence. Simply his name and date of his déath appear, with these words: "He feared man so little because he feared God so much." An English physician warns people against getting up as soon as they awake; twentyrminu- tes being about the right time to wait. That man could work up a fine practice in Canada, since people are already converted to his views. Among periodical visitors none receives a warmer welcome than Dr. Wilfred Grenfell, the guardian of the Labrador fishermen. life has been an epic. Like a true hero, he doesn't pose as one. Over three hundred years ago the advisers | of Queen Elizabeth thought Londdn w. ting too big. To-day the giant city is fifty times the size of the oné too unweildy for the Elizabethans. In ancient Rome's forum was a golden mile-- stone. from any point in the empire and travel directly | to this spot, considered the centre of the known | world. Bismark's room, in Berlin, is kept religiously just as he left it. Even the piece of sealing wax. | which the Iron Chancellor threw down after sealing his last letter, is undisturbed. Those with the greatest capacity for suffering | are always blessed with the keenest zest for én- joyment. - In the long run all comes fair. as Taking A Life For A Life. He should be in a circus, | His | as get- | Thither .all roads led. One might start | GLIMPSES OF MISSION LANDS. x, a ------ : 5 When a Lion Wakes Up He Is Full of Life and Power. China has been spoken of as a sick old man, because, though one of the oldest nations, for hundreds of years she has made no progress. But she has also been compared to a sleeping lion. The latter comparison is more encouraging. because, when an old man gets well, he is too fecble to do much work, but, when a lion wakes bis? e is full of life and power. In Shanghai an: sleeping lion and his awakening are cléar on every hand. In the crowded streets wheelbar- rows and open carriages with horses, driver and footman go side by side, while the electric car passes by them, and the motor turns the ricksha out of the way. &he electric light that is no new thing in the city is being put into St. John's Anglican college; the medical work at Wusih flourishes because introduced by the skilful prac- tice of a Chinese doctor; men trained in the U. 8. church university are taking leading places in English teaching in Chinese schools as trans- lators and interpreters; girls from St. Mary's are working in hospital, school and parish. One sees in the same city a great procession in which gigantic idol figures are carried through the crowded streets, and a school where men are being trained in foreign medicine and rooms where insane patients are treated with Christian care. Or one sces the white lanterns hanging above the houses where Buddhist priests for days pursue their rites, and poor old women kneeling for private prayers in the Roman church; or the young women from Germany, England and America, in the training-school of the China Inland Mission, putting on Chinese dress as a part of their preparation for their work ; while, in a private Chinese school, a little Japancse lady in bloomers is teaching the lancers to her Chinese girls! The Widows' Home, es- tablished by our veteran Chinese priest; the Slave Refuge, in which our bishop's wife is deeply interested; the Door of Hope, with its several houses, show how Christian philanthropy has be- gun its activities; while lectures, concerts, flower shows and exhibits of precious jade 'and. china tell how foreign and Chinese alike look for in- struction and entertainment. Shanghai, grown to over a million inhabitants, is coming to be a cosmopolitan city. Chinese men and women, whose training has begun there and is being con- tinued in England and the United States, in Scotland and Germany and Japan, will return to their own land with cosmopolitan ideas and in- terests, to introduce elements in the awakening | that is to come. BOYCOTT OF MISSIONARIES. More Difficult Than Ever to Find Attentive Hearers in Bombay Diocese. Mr. Gadney, who has been a missionary in | Bombay diocese for nearly forty years, makes to the S.P.G. officials this discouraging re- port: "Our touring catechist has found it more difficult than in former years to find at- | tentive listeners. There is a dead set against | Chri stianity and Christians, stronger than' I | have known in these parts, even to the extent of trying to make our Christians discontented | with their position. We feel in every turn what is known as the "boycott." This is ostensibly a movement in favor of Indian pro- ducts, accompanied by a refusal to have any- thing to do with drticles of European manu- facture. In reality it is a movement to try and make living in places' like Dapoli an im- possibility for English people. Difficulties be- set us on every hand, and people who have worked for us for years now refuse to come near us. It is not only our missionary work that is opposed, but our living arrangements in general. Servants are persuaded to leave us, or not to accept employment with us. Even the local tailor, a mender of clothes, who for many years was always ready to come and put our things in order, has been warned not tg do any work for English people. A branch of work that has given us plenty to do has been the preparation for deacon's orders of five students sent to Dapoli by the late Bishop. This work is now practically at an end, as the five men will shortly be ex- amined and, if successful, admitted to the diaconate. In all probability there will be no class here or elsewhere for some time, there { being no more candidates. The schools have been carried on as usual, but amidst a great deal of opposition and evil report intended to | upset them. The church services have been | regularly maintained in the room licensed by the late Bishop, no advance having been made | with the restoration of the church, which now | stands Without a roof. { - {with abnormally high prices. There is much talk about them, but no one seems able te | suggest a probable cause. There has been no | scarcity on this side of India for two years at | least, yet the cost of living, for Indians as well as for Europeans, is higher than it was lin famine times. This has made it difficult | to meet the expenses connected with our or- | phan children. All the people we employ are | calling out about the cost of living, and net a few are asking for an increase of pay, which | we cannot afford to grant. The natives of Solomon Islands are continually | involved in feuds, and many murders are com- | mitted upon the theory of "a life for a life." Whenever a man belonging to one tribe is killed by a member of another community,-no peace. is declared until the death has béén 'avenged, and | generally an inoffensive man is the victim. Strange stories concerning these islanders are | told by Miss Young, of the South Sea Island Evangelical Mission, who Has recently returned | to England. One morning a native left the mis- | sion to visit his garden a short distance away, | and while working there some Bushmen ap- proached and entered into conversation with him. After talking together and eating some fruit which the gardener offered them, they at-| tacked and murdered him. Thus was avenged a murder committed months previously by the vic- tim's tribe. In England And America. London Spectator. - Americans educate the mass, while we have always educated the leaders. democracy assenting to the method--we make | a point of Specially encouraging the promising pupils;weé build "ladders" believe that our indifference to the question of | what class of society they may come from a | sufficient proof of our genuinely habit of mind. 'Tt has Been the immemorial | - In England-- | for them, and we | tion of a Reading Is Of Light Order. | The class of popular reading has assumed | grave importance. It is not so much a ques- | tion of good versus bad novels, as one of light | versus solid literature. In most of the great lending libraries the number of books ef fiction distributed is out of all proportion to the rest of literature; in some cases it runs as high as | ninety per cent. The books may be innocent | enough, but it indicates a growing shallowness | of mind amongst the reading public. It also | explains why men are impatient of the higher things. The words of Bishop Phillips Brooks are worth recalling. "Do not forget that you | have only one mind, and if you dissipate it in frivolities you have only a dissipated mind | to bring to the contemplation of Divine things, | and Divine things are not comprehended by | dissipated minds." There is doubtful justifi- | cation for a library. committee expendin money raised compulsofily from the raté- payers, in purchasing books of neither educa- tional nor literary value, but merely serving to amuse. We should not abrogate our func-| sisting in elevating the social organ-| ism. | "The novels of the day are filled with heroes, democratic | and heroines who sin, and it is all treated as | will an accident, and as of little moment. But the] s province of Kiang-su the evidences of the One of our anxieties has been connected | Every Cork Branded RIGNEY & HICKEY 138 & 138 Princess St. MAGIC Makes Your EXPENSES Light Makes Your BISCUITS Light Makes Your CAKES Light Makes Your BUNS Light Makes Your LABOR Light ORDER FROM YOUR = => GROCER. E. WIGILLETT CO.,LTD. Toronto, Ont. Hector. 250ts. Handbook A handbook of accurate informatien compiled by competent authorities for the guidance of investors. Gives the location, area, and map showing geological formation, present devel ment, equipment and amount of ore shipped from the various mines. Gives also the capitalization, amount of stock issued, amount of treasury stock (if any) and the dividends to date. Gives the names of the Officers and Transfer Agents of the Cobalt Companies. - Bent post-paid for a5 cents. A.E. OSLER Gop Stock Brokers--Direct Wire Company 18 King Street West, TORONTO ng Distance "Phone Main 7434-7438 } Stocks Bought and Sold on Commission | 9 Correspondence Tavited DATENTS PROCURED ON EASY TERMS. TRADE-MARKS ano COPYRIGHTS Books and advice free, Fghest references. 20 years experi¢nce. We are registered attorneys; member of the Courts of the District of Colum® bia, Federal and New York State Courts, CRISWELL & CR/SWELL 43 anc 45 BROADWAY, NEW YORK CITY Washington Office, goz F Street ke Missing Feet. Collier's. Weekly: Nothing Dr. Drummond wrote is quainter in the way of dialect than this, letter received by a.firm of stove dealers in Montreal. "The only change that has been made is the name of the customer that had the kick coming: "Dear Sirs--] received de stove which I by from you airite. But for why you don't send me no feet? Wat is de use of de stove when he don't have no feet? 1 am loose to me my cus- tomer sure ting by not having de feet and dats not very pleasure for me. Wat is de matter wit you? Is not my trades money as good like anoder man's? You loose me my trade, and I am vree angre for dat. And now I tell you dat you are a blem fool and no goo. I send you back at 'wunce your stove tomorge for sure because you are such a blem foolish peoples, "Youfs Respeciulee, "Jean La Fleur," "P.S.--Since,l rite dis letter I find de feet in de hoven, excuse to me." KEEP LOOKING YOUNG. Do nol allow your gray hairs to make you old looking. haired beople are are back De The use of Hoyslill jp ealth restore the or Jaded you outhial color to. gra , DO matter how will Vo ep you locking. young. beni cad of of dof SAA da. Start gt aioe SATE, JAS. UB. McLEOD 18 interes: Por shoul hi Ww about the w'ovdegs 3 ho The new Yauinal Ryr *y Best--M ost convene feat. 4t cleanses' instantly. as it were, in the last heresy trials, has ceased to struggle, the antagonism of science and, baneful after-results. As the supply is plenti- philosophy to religious belief has not increas-! ful, it will be within the reach of people of ed, but on the contrary has grown less. The | small means. Dr. Bailey made his discoveries | were receiving no education at.all. Americans | of St. Anne's Toronto, in his sermon. He dee per movement and the growing force of | while examining pitchblende in Colorado. |-rather concentrate their attention on the ruck: he 2 speaking of the present-day tendency to! society are unquestionably on the side of free| When the substance was applied to the backs! The exceptional boy or girl, it is thought, will | drift from the faith as taught by Christ. The! truth. | of patients suffering from locomotor ataxia| rise in any case. The important thing to do fdanger was that .we might drift into mere | immediate relief was experienced, and in some | is t, advance the average: of education. forms of religion, though the Canadian church- In {cases comparative cures were effected. "The es" and colleges seemed to be trying to train further results with men up to the ancient faith and the true word of God. practice of England to train leaders for the influence is terrible, and unconsciously people] nation. This was done when most citizens | begin to do likewise," said Rev. L. E. he 1 fries your dragyist for it. OQ he Saraot lg ny the \ accept pe ae at end dy fod Samp 5S tinstoated he Sends La Fae bs The oldest lifeboat is at Redcar, Eng. an active service of 64 years she was used to' medical world awaits save S00 lives. great interest. ale da, Tt rim ad directions -in- i PPLY 00. Windsor, Oats Agents for ("vada i Trouble is merely the fire in which the character is tried. "

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