, {HE DAILY BRITISH WHIG. MO Cost of Industrial Insurance Further Reduced Voluntarily by THE PRUDENT NDAY JULY 19, 1909. AL Industrial Policies now being issued have increased Benefits averaging over 10 per cent. and will Give Many Millions of Dollars of Life Insurance more than the Old Rates would have provided Over 20 Million Dollars Extra Life Insurance has also been added voluntarily to Industrial Policies issued since January Ist, 1907, and in force July Ist, 1909, with no increase in premiums. Ag LTA: Sy a Rg GIBRALTAR ¥ ; \ i This is the Greatest Benefit to Policyholders Ever Granted by The Prudential and Provides More Life Insurance for the Money Than Any Similar Policy Ever Before Issued. Ordinary aad Industrial policies Ages | to 70. Both sexes. Amounts $15 to $100,000. JOHN F. DRYDEN, President. The Prudential Insurance Co. of America Incorporated as a Stock Company by the State of New Jersey. HOME OFFICE, NEWARK, NJ Agents Wanted to write Industrial and Ordinary Life Insurance Goed Income~Promotion~-Best Opportunities-Now ! Branch Office in Kingston--J. T. LEFEVER, Supt, 2nd Floor, T:legraph Building, No. 38 Clarence St. Ce -------- ---- A -- Prudential Agents are now canvassing in this f= They 'have a most vital story to tell of how Life Insurance has] vieinity. saved the home, protect- widow, and edu- Let ed the cated the children. them tell it to you. a ------------------------------" THE GREAT JOHN CALVIN A SKETCH OF THE REFORMER BY CANON HAGUE OF LONDON. Ie Was Born Four Hundred Years Ago Awakened Spirituality by Contact With the Word of God--Calvin stood Greatly Misunder- ague undred year a baby north tined to world though his which he igo July 10th hittle town to the France, who was de of the John realized born in a Pai greatest men of the ind Ne. was Calvin, was in the age mn ir hundred years of rolling time have led the grandeur of his personality For week e city of Geneva in Switzerland com work more than world-wide interest Britain, the Italy, mous neetings ol held and Great 3 Hungary, me of the most f nt church of to-day international have and celebration great tant Reformation. Who man, did he do this ind what the orld-wide in subject of a ration their re racter tore four lace he w prybably the day At university ot the still more and 1n the age of entered the he went to of Orleans, famous consequence of redible application he was declared one of his contemporaries, the most rson in Trained in the <chool of Roman dogmatism he was ntact with the word He became in wan the face of the carth and to the last d persecution on behalf of the prin- lurope d spiritually by cc consequence a uffer retorm enabled to nd in the In--spite--of-his-wanderings prosecute his theological 1536 he produced the which has made his name famous in the I world, "The Institutes," which was latin at Bade, that beautiful Rhine. © They read in English that make egant language The work was s« 1 great that it has him f Protestantism, and the Aris mation theslogy. his life a. passing ccame "in God's providence f "arel, the fiery | hand upon rk that wa great city It on of that n of Calvin's hf of Europe up the year hed in rushing were: mn with them a even to-day statelinegs made visit the Protestan him then being has been t chang , but the There he gréat work of life largely ty his inHuence radiat of Europé. He lived lustry In addition to ind the establishment or, medical dispensaries and dent In his was institutions codification of pitals ns, the Paris At | | and { land, and | the 'never be forgotten that he effort for pe account of his the Mec great age He me the recognized le the leaders of all the Protestant fc the continent Men flocked to him from every quarter. What Wittenburg was to Lutheranism, Calvinism became to the reform school of theology. He became the councillor of princes and nobles, letters to Edward VI, king of Eng Elizabeth, the Virgin Queen, to the Prime Minister, and Cranmer, Archbishop, are still to-day of than interest In fact Im was regarded an oracle the impress of thoughts left upon every current system His Geneva strenuous and unremittent ind unity, he ional reputation as a that the order laws, 1ce, became on intern: cholar ca for the reformers of bec irces of his Somerset, more temporary almost as his and was theo logieal life in was al together He lectured three times a week, attended business kinds, went as yious conferences of preached every day, meetings of all delegate to al s of re international mterest life, and al at an-age that m down to their life Emerson once said that to bk tood, lived a simple nd strenuous ost in the very prime of life died imy men are! almost settling work great is to be char- history He had which and probably no great acter has been misunderstood 1 than He was certain outstanding faults, the ind Luther' umor misunder ore mn Calvin not perfect chief of austerity, the optimism and con » great blemish upon his consent to the burn But even in connection with remember the age m which he of such a thing as the denial of the Deity of Christ, and the difficulty of the 20th century Christian appreciating the standpoint of the men of those-days. If he was narrow he was not any narrower probably than St. Paul or Augustine. If his chief re putation that of a theologian it must was a'l f rigid very posite tagions | if me this we lived, the horror cheery historically was his ot Servetus must was wis as a Christian of the greatest of all cific reformers. In humble, simple; a man one was modest, upright No The actaal spot remains an the He published character he to-day God-fearing, ston marks hi known Erave His monument is the reform the world more than 50 large volumes, many of have to-day He amassed money, giving it freely to relieve the poor Calvin died worth about hundred dol I'he central feature of em was the and and the words of his last "In all controversies have carried oragainst the enemies of trutl employed no sophistry; but have fou d fight in simplicity and truth." theology of churches of T 1 which circulation ne two his theological the glory of will and testi which greatness the The Beauties Of Worship. only told man to w ut t w to doi He gave to the Childr form of worship wl : l and money and troul verythi we of t very and st He loves them that love Him, and hip | Lime X I costliest and wtiful takes pl in sacrifice. God is the same and so we that ind everything to do with them should means will allow And here e Christian brotherhood ; the rich ca: and the:poor bat little, but the ch equally to all. We must not give our best, for He is the All He was then, see our our Giver of { crooked 1 HAS MANY QUALITIES. A Missionary Preacher, Community Builder and a Trader. Courier 1s the In I y SCOwW--is sionary, her of the gospel but a trader. The poetic remnants of the day the was more used for navigation remarkable, craft; sta and buckboard in his half-breed 'Edmonton of bags, boxes and bales-- trading to the~Indians at the mis hundred miles of crooks and rapids ike; at the bow sweep the half breed man; at the stern pole the missionary his wisp of tobacco smoke mingling from the fire-box. Croak round the the this gospel scow siX- the ( anadian Tl Anglican missionary at irom the best who is ute place to not only a community SCOW preac nd the Saskatchewan now A umidships the team the missionar ith driven overthd trail te shrouded Tor lwo LePuilder 1S One misswonary than it mate has rampart goods sion to Onion | close by, oudly with the trail curves ot her missionary's ing and crawling ver, on days' keeps green in mag Battle and St. was old Pakan a half 'breed colony Past ment not ford on ight bank Paul Meti the the mud chimneys the half-breed mate sixth diay out--and the laments that he 1 moose swimming the river as it at the the century the railway came; even the moulting wild geese ind alongshore the bald gleaming hot beginning of before are dots of domes of the scarce; settlers' A few: years ago un- splendid hills nothing of this; the unvexed solitude broken by cven the flat-bottomed that went off when the branch railways pushed up from the old south; and before that the long York boats that plied to the fur posts from Hudson's y When the a company steamers line lands he greeted by red men whose souls missionary of Crees; the and hill seven the t the s: the and bodies children he the beavers under shepherds {rem north. ~ Busy 'as wumb of thé over-lord they ks, bundles and waggons and soon the cargo his Heated mission miles lug ashore Doses Down come ver the buckbo police rig of the red barracks. ate crawls in a slow caravan « he missionary in his the rear tl coated sergeant whose yell 1t ow ym thd mi two miles fr ssion } he n ment is the metropolis. house; one store of shack of the little churches. aggregation gency Company and tere two ireneous lean-tos, known as and hold timbers in Ednionton and for the lumber and immed with hay; n from the sloughs and 1ay in 'the dry season In the yard a mob of ie with foot- ion comes a pale careful prairie uplands and upland in the w Cree t ball lads sh ng OWS; some Out of the n the n She is a doc- and the two are both teachers and i needs of the ry's wife charge of AT the women u h 1d use Crees; case nurses, acording: to Unloading of got babbling Crees; hunters yds bri a pack of idle and women-----blan- Edmonton down | symptoms; board" which | A canvas- | 1 Uf days when from Edmonton to ake Winnipeg the only settle- | lars by cy humpty shacks with | has seen not | there was used to be | es spangle the fat round | 'baths; the laced-in keted women---and babies in cases The missionary's room is audience chamber, office, study and for dry-goods Almost time of day half a Crees may be found congregated here o buy and and jabber of the and the do sick but airs his the cargo stotehouse any dozen Some t to beg; many to smd and the fish ngs of And if a to visit the mission, there he profoundly pleased to note pack of hospital stores fetched with the of goods--packs of gauze and lint; bottles of chloroform; bottles of and brandy; sundry not the bottles af cod-liver oil which to the of grand medicinal wife compels the w h natives verily Zoods some hunt police. baskets Cree 1s able whiskey least medicines among which are Cree I'he awe sort beverage 1S a missionary mnderin of the and knowledge of he was 'a missionary in Since They believe craft ling belong Once undergraduate iN medicine ¢ at Onion Lake she has completed her exami nations M.D. besides bring ing up a family of children she India--th her for the degree of Three Thousand Dollars a Foot. For one foot frontage of land in the City Edmonton a that city has been offered three ind dol the bank One 1 and offered for the en Ther jist as tore rcantile rm 1 thou hundre well-known m one of thousand dollars was The offer was refused storey store fifty tire lot thre on the property ago; but as the the bank, it wa the estimate three nine years used by value in sat remember th bluff from which a few years before not The thousand dol tC . poplar dn ind down not be counted of any land on that corner a foot! Well do 1 nine years ago mainly a could lars rne of htt nton boys used to chase jack-rabbits the street that dge-leg, fine. wid ind whole length of lined with its little shacks of trade one might see the wild prairie re hanging through the wooden fences along with the bells. y Vacant lots everywhere; here and there a reltw of the Klondike outlandish zig that had gone the trail and come back or had not gone at.all. fur town then was a reminiscence of busy time that opened up that wh the { tl world--the delirium the overland commerce blue SOM the huge eyes of route. Where People Live Longest. in Sweden and. Not country, while mor- 17 per 1,000 in 14; miant Long way. Thus in the former tality in T1880 averaged only habitants, in 1906 it had fallen fo mortality shrank from-112 per 1,000. In Nor the rate showed a from 16 to 13 per 1,000, and that from 95 t 69. For these healthy bits. of the popul 1 are l nization « evily 1s common reduction of rates responsible way infants the hygienic ha public admirab f hospital the ric of habitation Again, there inevitable .sickness ave faith in rec Cansequently, « caut toward wegla geientific ach ce , and in- dical overies. n- tagious-case becomes a public matt dividual liberty is never placed opposition to the general welfare: The man who returns tree which renders its s tq those who cast verb. stones rsian Pro "i REAL ESTAT All Our $5.00 Men's Oxford Ties Re- duced to $3.75. All Our $4.00 Oxfords Reduced to $2.98 ®» We 5 wish to carry over one single pair of Men's Oxfords. We have "an, Pat. Colt and Gun Metal in both grades. These liges represent the last word in Up-to-Date Shoemaking. Come in and look at these Smart Shoes. MH. SUTHERLAND & BRO. The Home 'of Good Shoe! Making, ARABLANAANAALLOANLALAALALAAALALAAAGAALELAALS i . » * FF o > California Fruit 4 ORANGES PLUMS = PEACHES _ GRAPE FRUIT b The best--1he most luscious, Fresh arrivals almost daily. Just the thing for picnics, outing lunches, ete. : "7 TOYE'S, King St. PPI PIII III PIII IPP IVI SII IIIS IIIS VIII IIVIIIP IIIS (OAMMAMBRALMborbbdbd * A FEW OF OUR "BARGAINS 3,200, 4,600, 9 rooms, B. and C. . % rooms, Garden and Barn 8B rooms, heated Ly stoves | rooms, good verandah, hot air . 9 roows, large barn and shed . A choice list of buifding lots. CITY BROKERAGE J. 0, HUTTON, J. R. C. DOBBS, 18 Market St., 41 Clarence St., 'Phone, 703, "Phone, 480a.