Daily British Whig (1850), 26 Nov 1909, p. 10

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-" THROWING MONEY AWAY . Until | Tried Gin Pills." Mr. P. Fitzgerald was completely dis- heartened, He had suffered so long/ with his Kidneys, and spent so much money on doctors without relief, that he had made up his mind he could not be cured, . Then, he chanced to read about the wonderful cures by Gin Pills, the great Kidney Remedy, and sent for a sample, The pills did him so much good that he immediately bought two full size boxes, And these two boxes of Gig Pills made him feel like another man. But let Mr. Fitzgerald tell his own story of a really remarkable cure. Provincial Asylum, Orillia . June 18th, I have much pleasurein stating that the sample, which you sent me, led me tobuy two boxes of Gin Pills from a local drug- gist. 'They are the Dest remedy for Unie Acid Trouble that I ha%e ever tried, I must say that before using Gin Pills, I had undergone a long and expensive course of treatment by eminent special ists of Chicago, They did me no good-- it seemed like throwing money aw.y. 1 still keep a box of Gin Pills on hand and take one occasionally, Iam pleased to recommend them and bear testimony to their efficacy, P. FITZGERALD, After reading such a letter at this, you simply can't doubt the value of Gin Pills in cases of Kidney and Bladder Trouble. If you are a sufferer, write the National Drug & Chemical Co. Dept. B. Toronto, for a free sample of Gin Pills and try them at our expe: After you have seen for yourself ji... what Gin Pills will do, buy the full size box at your dealer's, and remember that Gin Pills are sold with a positive guarantee of a cure or money refunded, ow iy Cr LE HANDSOME JEWELRY CATALOGUE FREE )UR 144 page Cataiogue illustrated in colors will be sent free upon request. This is the finest Cata- logue of Diamonds, Jewelry, Silverware, Ching, Cut Glass, Leather Goods, Stationery and Novelties ever issued. We prepay all express charges on cvery article | sold by us and cheerfully refund the money if goods are not satisfactory, RYRIE BROS, Limited 134-138 Yonge Street | TORONTO "Trbelrdie dred # Old English Floor Wax AND Powder. The perfection of fin- salir » ish for hardwood floors, w There is no Floor Wax ; Justas good as Old Eng- ; ' lish, Be ware of imita- ' tions. © Sold in 1 lb, 2 1b-4-1b. tins, 50c. Lb. --b Lm ' Marshall's Hardware. refelolofalododfaleelo bdo doledolgag CARTERS Bick Headache and relieve all the troubles incl dent to a bilious state of the system, such as Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsiness, Distress after eating, Pain in the Side, &c. While their most rewsrkable success bas been shown in cuiing SICK Feadache, yet Carter's Little Liver Pills are equally valuable in Constipation, curing and pre~ venting thisannoying complaint, while they also correct all disorders of thestomach stimulate the sliver snd regulate the bowels. Even if they only -- HEAD Acha thay would be almost priceless to those who suffer from this distressing complaint; butfortu- | nately their goodness does notend here,and those | who once try them will find these little pills valu. able in so oe Ams ways that they will not be wil ling to do without them. But after allsick AC Inthe bane of #0 many lives that here is where © "wo make our great others do not. . Carter's Little Liver Pills are very small and very easy to ge. One Selva ils rpm They are strictly vegetable and do no pe purge, but by their gentle action please all who use them. Me CARTER MEDICINE 00., NEW T0BZ. mal FL Smal Don Smal Brie, 0 BRIGHTEN LIVES TORONTO GLOBE WILL ENTERTAIN ITS STAFF. Ignorance "of Bible in Universities in United States Said to be Disgrace--Average Fresh. man Knows Little of That Great Book. The Globe, of Toronto, which has for two score years, at least, maintained as high a level as a paper for news as Canada can sup- port, and while loyal to liberalism, has been fair to opposing parties, not a threadbare in- dulgence generally, has added another to its créditable features. For the benefit of the business and literary staffs, a camping ground near Port Dover has been purchased. Here in turn for two weeks each, in cottages, the employees become the guests of the directors and. shareholders. The idea sprang from the good heart of J. F. Mackay, the Globe's man- ager, whose summer home is at the Port, and his suggestion was cordially acted upon. The example is worth something to the country. Many employers may not be unwilling to similarly brighten the lives of their faithful workers, if some people will only suggest places and opportunities. : B. F. Yoakum, railroad magistrate, in ad- dressing Oklahoma farmers, said these true things: "A forty-acre farm of irrigated land will comfortably support a family of five. It costs $55000 to make a 12-inch gun. This money would reclaim 1,571 acres of land, pro- viding homes for 196 people. When the guns on all U.S. battleships are shot one time, the government blows off in noise and smoke $150,000. This would reclaim 4,000 acres of land, giving homes to 500 farmers and their famiNes, The money consumed in powder is lost to all future. The farmer who buys the reclaimed land must pay the government back in .ten years, so it does not cost the govern- ment anything." Mr. Yoakum's idea is sound; the quicker new nations put our emphasis on the making rather than the destruction of values the better. "And the crowd jeeered." So says a report from Orangeville, speaking of the unsuccess- ful chase ofa lawless, domineering brute who had beafen a constable on duty. It was not their father, son or brother that was hurt, nor their family very nearly deprived of their boast. Qur pills cure it while | provider and' protector, therefore "the crowd | jeered." It was for the interest and safety of | the whole community that the man who defies | the law and assaults others at will be captured, and the crowd which jeered were a parcel of cowards, afraid of the fugitive's vengeance, or they would have joined in the chase. If the police had not acted they would have been denounced freely by the "crowd" and many other crowds. That they were jeered at prov- es again that a mob is not only an unreflect- ing thing, but it is an aggregation of unblush- ing cowards, Our dear old friends "at home" have "dis- covered" corn on the cob. The farmers of Essex have been growing corn to feed cows with, but hearing that there were even humans who would eat this cow food, sent some to Covent Garden. Directions were for cooking and eating the new thing, lest people should "tackle" it raw, whiskers, cob and all, as the cows do. Those who meant to eat it on the cob, were told to "roast it in hot wood ashes until brown, then soak it in but- ter, adding a sprinkling ®fesalt and pepper." But the humiliation of using cow fodder is still felt, since it was added that "the nibbling of the cob in this fashion should be done, if possible, in the privacy of the family circle only." In English-speaking countries the kissing of the Book before the oath comes from the practice of touching a "halidame," or sacred object, as the old Roman touched the altar or Harold the casket of relics. The form "So help me God" is inherited from ancient Teu- tonic- Scandinavian law, under which the old northmen, touching the blood daubed ring on the altar, swore, "So help me Frey and Niordh |and the Almighty God"--this is Thor. The |names of the first and last of these two old English gods we preserve in Friday and { Thursday. According to President Northrop, of the University of Michigan, the ignorance of the Bible in the universities of the United States is a disgrace to scholarship. The average freshman, and even the senior, knows little of {that great book, and in some quarters this igriorance is regarded as something of which to be proud. This is the result &f the system which excludes religious thought from the in- stitutions of learning, beginning with the primary school. The state of public morals corroborates the Christian complaint The decision by Ohio Methodists to banish clocks from churches recalls the story of the old elder attending a meeting where it was proposed that a clock do adorn the wall of the new church. A rather spirited controversy took place. It looked like an even break, and as both sides entertained a high opinion of Brother Smith's views on all matters, he was {asked to express himself. "I am against the proposition. The church is no place for time. We meet there to corisider eternity." The proposition was lost, accordingly. The Gentleman's Magazine in 1741 records the appointment of Mr. Gower as rat-killer to his Majesty--"a place of £100 a year, an hon- orable office." A similar position was held previously by a woman, for a warrant issued in 1672.by the Master of the Ordnance, states that "whereas Elizabeth Wickley is employed | in killing of tattes and other vermins, in and about his Ma"te's stores and houses in ye { Tower of London, I have therefore thought { fitt fo allow her ye sum of eight pounds per annum." { The vicar of Burton (Eng.,) Rev. H. B. | Freeman, makes a spirited protest against the demand for short sermons: "I am quite willing | to compress my sermons or the first Sunday | mornings of each month within the space of, | say, fifteen minutes, but I will not truckle to | the lazy, latter-day craze for absorbing spiri- {tial nourishment in tabloid form. The 'tit- { bits,' 'snappy snips,' or 'snippy shots' methods lof instruction, if good at all, are more suit- | able for the world than for the church." There { now! t has been freely thought in America that a venerable church at Charleston, South Caro- beaq | lina, which has a public lighthouse situated in | its steeple was the only one of its kind in the world. A patriotic Dane, however, points out { that hig country possesses a similar curiosity {in the steeple of the church at Thuno,-a small {island in the Kattegat. Then the Government | of Canada maintains a bright light in the lofty | dome of Kingston's (Ont) city hall, for the | benefit of lake mariners. The accuracies of science are marvellous. | Before photography was applied to stars the i A <Y RaT i highest number catalogued was 457,847. The published ne number the perfected camera shows is 30,000,000. So sensitive are some of the new seismographs that if two were mounted on roofs of high buildings on opposite sides. of a busy street they would show that these buildings bent slightly toward each other when traffic is heaviest. Broaden your life where ever you can. Plant new fields. Make sure that things are growing, growing. Pay a visit, write a letter, say a kind word, seek out others more timid or'less blessed than yourself. Associate with human beings, and if you cannot find human beings in real life, associate with them in fiction and history. How much have yon associated with, understood, or loved human beings to-day? Rev. Dr. Chapman, after a four months' tour in Australia, has been converted to a new point of view on evangelistic work. In his missions' he bas required that the ordinary services in the church give way to special meetings. He now feels that this method is a mistake, and that the ordinary work of the churches would be stimulated to a greater ex- tent if it went on as usual and so. became inter-weaved with the mission. Clergymen invaded shops, factories: and theatres in New York as an extension of a mission plan which the Presbyterian Board of Home Missions has been carrying on in St. Louis, Chicago, Newark, Buffalo and Ro- chester. Factory packing cases and chorus girls' baggage were used as pulpits for the preachers, who sought by short sermons to "take the heathenism out of business and soften its hard lines." ] Sunday, November 28th, will by common consent of churches, be the World's Temper- ance Sunday. The Dominion Alliance, ar. ranging field days in the cities of Ontario, is planning a monster demonstration in Toronto with over an hundred pulpits giving a temper- ance sermon. Speakers from outside cam- paigns, as well as from places where Local Option by-laws are in force; will assist. Addressing the Queen's Daughters at St. Louis, Father Phelan declared that good dress, is conducive to salvation. It was next to im= possible to teach the Ten Commandmenys to a barefoot man, woman and child, The best way to begin was to furnish the lower class with neat clothing. The ladies should teach the lower classes to make their own clothes, so they would be presentable. The Presbyterian Church in the United States appreciates publicity. To reach the people they are trying to convert they have started a number of weekly religious papers in the Italian, Bohemian, Hungarian and Ru- thenian languages, interesting thousands who could not be approached in any other way. The principle of concentration is being in- creasingly applied in Scotland. Strong con- gregation are linking themselves with con- gregations in necessitous localities, thus feder- ating the religious forces of the country, and economically directing the zeal of the church upon places where the needs are clamant. The native government of Mysore, Indj has introduced religious teaching into it schools and colleges. Hindu instruction will be given from the Hindu sacred writings, Mo- hammedan instruction from the Koran, Chris- tian instruction from the Bible, to the pupils of these respective faiths, In New York, meetings have been in. augurated for Wednesday afternoons -at lead- ing vaudeville theatres. The leading evan- gelical clergymen are to conduct services in turn. The two already held have been well attended by actors and actresses, stage hands and attaches generally. A curious fact has been recalled, that a bronze statue, erected in New York to the memory of General Wolfe, still stands at the entrance to No. 56 Broadway. After the Brit- ish troops evacuated the city after the Revo- lutionary war, the statue of George III was pulled from its pedestal, but the monument commemorating the achievement of a British general was undisturbed despite that time. of passion. The Crutch and Kindness League is one of the most touching of England's many benevo- lent organizations. -To every member is as- signed a cripple child to take an interest in and particularly to write to at least once a month. These letters are looked for and priz- ed as a bright spot in shadowed life. Among London's poor are over nine thousand cripple children. *In one of his able lectures, in England, Canon Beeching said, "that our minds are still 'held captive by the Elizabethan ideal of uniformity in worship, and we do not readily allow that men's dispositions vary, and there- fore that the modes of their worship should be allowed to vary." The spectacle of.a Canadian, or any, poet living on. the proceeds of his verse is rare. Yet there is #ctually in Canada a young poet with a handsome income. The other day $5,000 was mailed to Robert W. Service, the poet of the Yukon, to cover royalties on his two books of verse for twelve months. " over The Advent Week of Prayer, The "Week of Prayer" which lay brother- hoods in many religious bodies in Britain and |. America have arranged, corresponds with the first week in Advent. This will be the third year in which the Brotherhood of St. An- drew has asked church people to observe the week. The subject suggested for this year is simply "Prayer." [It is divided into daily meditations during the octave: Sunday, The Idea of Prayer. Monday, Agreement in Prager. Tuesday, Prayer and the Will of God. Wednesday, Prayer in Christ's Name. Thursday, Prayer and Work. Friday, Prayer and Sacrifice. Saturday, Prayer the Road to Unity. Sunday, Prayer and Thanksgiving. A leaflet containing outlines for meditation on the several topics may be obtained from the Brotherhood, 88 Broad St., Boston. Selby Abbey Restoration. The seal is to be put upon a notable act of church restoration on October 19. Selby Ab- bey, desolated by fire three years ago, will be reopened by the Archbishop of York. The Abbey, restored to even more than its form. er beauty, stands as one of the classical archi- tectural treasures of the country. Oldred Scott, son of the famous Sir Gilbert, has been the architect. The restoration has cost about $250,000. The interior has been rebuilt as nearly as possible as before the fire; the most interesting of the new adornments are the panels of the reredos,"by Peter Rendle, the artist-actor, and the. tower, rising fifty-two feet higher than the old ome. It is in the decorative style of the choir, and midway be- tween is corner pinnacles are four life-size sculpured figures of King Edward VII, Wil- liam the Conqueror, Archbishop MacLagan, and Abbot Hugh, ER 26, 1989. IN A MADAGASCAR MISSION. How the Poor Women Are Affected by the 5 Gospel Message. i The pilgrim band has become a large com- pany, and many are the greetings and the hand-shaking before we are free to enter the little chapel. The first question is invariably the same. "The little children--how are they?" and it is touching how eagerly they await the answer. Then they are free to inquire: "And are you? and how is our Father-and- Mother?" (the missionaries). Then the dear old evangelist, a saint of God surely, comes up with the key, so we enter the church and give out the sewing. Sixty women have ceme together (from the sparsely-populated coun- try), so we are kept fully occupied for a couple of hours explaining the intricacies of the buttonhole or of the "setting-out-and-re- turning-home-in-the-same-day stitch' (i.e., back-stitcli)! Then work is quietly put away, babies are hushed to sleep, and we gather for our "quiet hour." What a charm there is in these women's faces as they listen to the | Gospel story. It is a simple message to sim- pie folk, telling of the love of God our Father manifested to us in Christ, His power to help, comfort, bless, save. Nothing could be sim- pler, and yet their faces shine and the eyes of some of the older women are moistened as we speak of the tender sympathy of our Lord. These poor, ignordint Malagasy women have a wonderful gift of prayer, and would fain linger, but four hours have passed in the church, and to one, at least, comes the sound of children's voices, twenty miles away across the mountains, calling us home; reluctantly, the wonien are persuaded to say their good- byes "until we meet again." Degradation of Holy Worship. The New York Herald of Monday gave a review of services in Anglican churches in New York in a style that must shock every sincere worshipper of God. The report of one church's attendance is characteristic of several columns given. Fashion is a ruthless degrader: : Services in the Church of All Angels were well attended because of the return to town of many parishioners. The music, following the English Cathedral model, was notably good, and an excellent sermon was preached by the rector, Rev. Dr. S. De Lancey Town- send. Among those in the congregation were Representative and Mrs. J. Van Vechten QO} cott, recently returned from Europe. Mrs. 4Olcott was gowned in an elaborate coat suit of black velvet and broadcloth, built on very long lines. Her hat was of black velvet, full crown, with soft brim outhining the face, and trimmed at the left sidé with a marabout aigrette. Mr. and Mrs. Charles F. Hoffman, present for 'the first time this season, having just re- turned after a summer spent at Newport. Mrs, Hoffman, who dispensed with a wrap, was elaborately gowned in a light shade of wis- taria velvet, and wore a large hat of black beaver, trimmed with a dark tone of wistaria velvet and ostrich plumes. She wore furs. Litg)> Miss Marion Hoffman wore a peacock green velvet coat and a picture hat of the same faced with white. Miss Mary Townsend, daughter of the rec- tor, wore a modified Directoire coat suit of black cloth, embellished with many black jet buttons. At the throat she wore a large bow of emerald greem velvet and her small cap turban of black beaver was trimmed with a large rosette of the green velvet and jet. Mr. and Mrs. Luther Laflin Kellogg were early attendants, as usual in mourning, Mrs, Kellogg wearing a blgck cloth suit, the long coat trimmed with dull silk, her small turban of .the silk- with quill trimming Mrs. Archer Vance Pancoast wore a suit of dark wistaria broadcloth, the long, loose coat braided with black. Her large black hat was of velvet with black ostrich feathers, and she wore a long black ostrich boa. Colonel and Mrs. Thomas Dimond were al- so present, Mrs. Dimond wearing a black vel- vet coat suit and black hat. Miss Florence Diménd's black cloth suit was trimmed with black satin, and her beaver turban was also of black, with a white aigrette. Popular Weather Signs Are Sound. Men of science tell that in some cases what are characterized as old womén's stories are practically correct--for instance, counting numbers from the lightning flash\{o the sound of thunder locates in miles the Svat of the disturbance. The approach of rain is signal- ed, so say the observant country folk, in many ways: The swifts and the swallows skim close to the ground; the cat'washes his face, and the chaffinch has a sad and plaintive Yiote; the farmyard goose runs about and shows general restlessness; the peacock utters frequent cries; the woodpecker 'moans and sighs; the parrot chatterss the guinea fowl perches; the frog remains silent; the toad walks about; flowers have a stronger odor and many among them close up. There are other signs none the less sure for fine weather: The birds twitter: the redthroat sings on the top of the highest trees; the swallow flies into the clouds; the lark rises from the ground and mounts into the: air singing; the cricket makes his cry heard; the tree frog climbs the trees, and the flowers open, = An everlasting flower hung on a wall opens in fine weather/find closes when it will be rain. When the spider leaves off working at its web, it is a sjgn of rain. If it continues or recommences' its weaving during the night it is a sign that the good weather will return. When rain begins to fall, if the hens do not hide themselves, but continue to look for their food, it means that the rain will not cease all day. If they take refuge at thé first drop of rain it is a sign that it will not last. When only one magpie leaves its nest it is a pign of rain. If the father and mother quit it to- gether it is a sign of good weatjen A College With Millions. Ten. years ago the valuation of the Girard College (Philadelphia) properties was sixteen million dollars and the income was about one million. 'But much even of this is unimproved and the Board of City Trusts is making ar- rangements to increase the general productive- ness. It is dredging rivers and filing up marshy 'land. The cost of improving this property will be ten million dollars, the annual income from it for the support of Girard Col- lege about seven hundred thousands or twice as much as the present cost of development; the time required for the work will be fifteen years. The name of Girard seems to be a mascot for any enterprise. The other night there was a dinner of Philadelphia business men, to celebrate the attainment of forty mil- lions of deposits by the Girard National Bank. \ A LATTER DAY PILGRIMAGE. Neglect and Decay Worse Than Bigotry and ! Greed. 3 HarbleddWn, a mile from Canterbury on. the London road, has the Canterbury spell. Up its winding hill came the pilgrims of St Thomas from London and the Midlands. By its leper church they stopped. At the Black Prince's well they drew water. Like Colet and Erasmus, the cynical quizzed the saints' shoe leather they were called to kiss, or else hailed it as tNe earnest of things still more wonderful to be scen in the town beyond. The lazar house bas been replaced by" neat almshouses for men #nd women in stone and flint; the little beds in front are full of old~ fashioned flowers--good Kentish lavender, bright hollyhocks, high-climbing roses, stocks, pinks and Canterbury bells; at the back spread the long avenues 6f a vast hop garden down the hillside. A little hall is in the centre, where the ancient treasures of the place are kept. . _ But the church on the hilltop is as it was in leper times, only scarred and disfigured by age. Neglect and decay have warred against it more than bigotry or greed, for a leper church was no doubt its own safeguard. Therefore you can trace either side of the cast window the Virgin with her lily and re- verent haloed Gabriel. The child angels in the upper light wave still their censers of gold, and Ezekiel's cherubims'staikd on their wheels adoring. In the side w Nicholas, the patron of the church, and his fellow-bishop, despite the rich colors of their vestments, have lost their heads--but this is made up to us by the wonderful quality of this thirteenth century glass, the beauty and appropriateness of the canopy of Canterbury bells and the completeness of the vignette of the Ascension in the light above, Originally a little apsidal Norman the church was expanded bit by bit cel, aisles and tower; two of the arches that separate 'the north aisle from the nave are Norman, and rest on a sturdy Norman pillar, with a capital formed of an angel with out- spread wings. Two fourteenth century seats, Worm-eaten and bare, stand in the nave, and it is in the little choir that the few old almsmen and women meet like a family for prayer. On the north side of the chancel is the Easter sepulchre, for the lepers kept Easter with full honors; by the north door the plain fifteenth century font, and in the pavement of the nave that slopes upward to the chancel some ancient tiles, one showing a quaint figure of a monk, known as "the Canterbury pilgrim." In front of the choir lies the last leper-chaplain, "Here lyeth Lennard of Lovelace, Reader, 1671," says the stone. The last leper died soon after, and the foundation was reconstituted. So he almost outlived the disease to which he was called to minister. ' Then there is a wonderful little muséum of the household goods of the middle ages, col- lected from various places, but actually seen where they were used. The great chaldron in which the lepers' food was cooked over char- coal, made of brass and copper, sounding like a sweet-toned bell when struck, with its mak- er"s mark clear and sharp, as if engraved yes- terday; the knives and forks, the rollingpin, the bread trencher, worn so thin as to be almost transparent; the baking dishes and skewers--all these and many more ready to be used to-day if needed telling their tale far more eloquently than if ranged in glass Gases In some great museum. ; The relics, long wonderfully preserved, in. clude the renewal of the charter drawn up at the registry of Archbishop Peckham in 1291 with several ancient almsbowls. The one with the great watery looking stone in its centre, with the leather that has long been worn away; was offered" for nearly 400 years as a portion of Becket's shoe for the pilgrims' kiss- es. An alms box; double-locked, stands among the relics. And the sight of these things car- ried us back to that transition time when the old forms were dying of decay and the spirits of the wise were already started on the pil- grimage that is not over yet. i -------------- Farmers and the Fast Car. A recent railroad wreck in Illinois, in which an excursion train running at high speed and carrying five hundred passengers collided with another train;~is unusual in two particulars. To a steel coach at the forward end of the excursion train is due the remarkable escape of the passengers, of whom only one was kill ed and thirty-five injured. Then farmers for miles around were awakened by the crash, "and were scon on the scene in automobiles," m which the victims were hurriedly taken to the nearest town. The farmer's auto means much. It presages that his plow and planter 'and harvester will be motor yehicles." It means that, like his city brother, he will think nothing of a ten or fifteen Ne ride at the end of a day's work to make a visit" P4rmers who can g0 to town in twenty minutes, when formerly they spent two hours on the way, are no longer isolated. The ability to exchange frequent visits with others for miles around will make for That] broadening of ideas which means a more en- joyable life, a longer life, and a larger finan- cial return for their work. And perhaps it means that the auto farmer will be a more enlightened and liberal churchman; or perhaps it will mean, as it does now with city motor- ists, that he will rarely go to church, in that he will take Sundays for tripping it. In Can- ada farmers have been charged with top-buggy extravagance, What will be the cry like when the auto arrives at the farm? cleapel, with chan- What the Churches Lack. In the cities and towns, with the approach of winter, the problem of proper ventilation of churches and other places of public as- sembly comes prominently into mind. And churches suffer more in this respect than other places where people congregate, for the pub- lic demand that these places, theatres, music halls, and thg like--be ventilated in modern fashion. But no matter how gich a church is, it is always poor, because a church's work is endless, and the greater the work the more opportunities are revealed for doing good with money. Very few churches have a system of ventilation. In the summer they depend on the windows for fresh air. In winter, the congregations are either imprisoned in a tightly- closed room, that soon becomes full of impure air, or they are exposed to death- dealing grafts of cold. The want of oxygen in the one case renders the congregation so drowsy and stupid that they fail to grasp the thought that the preacher intends to convey; in the other case, the intermittent shiver plan brings about the risk of winning immortality by the pneumonia method. What is necded is a system that will let the foul air out at the top, on the vacuum or air pump principle {which does not cause a downward draft), and will let warmed, pure air in at the bot- tom of the building. indow, it is true, St] PURIFIED HS BLOOD Dr, Morse's indian Root Healed Mr. Wilson's Sores When the sewers of the b i i Ae Jie up, "the quickly becomes i frequently sores break out over the body. .. The way to heal them, as Mr. Richard Wilson, who lives near London, Ont, found, is to purify the blood. He ee i Mn. ow y ite left me and 1 soon began to. suffer f; indi- Quite a number of sores formed all over my skin. 1 medicine for the blood and used kinds of ointments, but without a of he so the : ' it in vain for some médi- that would accom; this. THE BEST POSSIBLE 'KMAS PRESENT Present your wife with the home lighted - with Electric Light. She would be DELIGHTED, It is our specialty and take pains to do it right. Gas and Electric Supplies. i. W. Newman Eeetric Co., "Phone, 441. 79 Princess street. FIFIIIIIIIIIIIIINIIINN Had Weak Back. Would Often Lie in 'Bed for Days Scarcel Able to Turn Herself. Weak back comes from the and when the kidneys are out of order whole system becomes dera . Those who have never been troubled with kid- ney trouble do not know of the suffer and misery which those afflicted und Doan's Kidney Pills are a specific all kidney troubles. They begin by heiping the kidneys to flush of all the acrid and poisonous impurities which have collected, thus slcaring out the kidneys, bladder and the urinary passa and carryi away the uric acid, the ehief --_-- rheumatism, from the blood. Mrs. Arch. Schnare, Black Point, N.B., writes: --" Kor years | was troubled with i Ro Gfontine-i~have lain a bed for days, being scarcely able to turn myself, and I have also been a great sufferer while trying: to perform m household duties. 1 had doctors attend- ing me without avail and tried liniments and plasters, but nothing seemed to do me any good. I was sbout to give up Pin despair when my husband induced me to try Doan's Kidney Pills, and after using two boxes I am now well and able to do ay work. 1 am positive Doan's Kidney Pills are all that you claim for them, and I would advise all kidney sufferers to give them a fair trial." Price, 50 cents per box, or 3 for $1.25, at all dealers or The T. Milburn Co., Lim- ited, Toronto, Ont. 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