Daily British Whig (1850), 22 Apr 1911, p. 12

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. PAGE TWELVE, ~~~ HOTEL DIRECTORY. " DESERONTO. ! GO TO THE STEWART HOUSE, LEAD. ing Commercial Ho'el. Rates, $1.50} per day : THOS, STEWART, Prop. | TRAVELLING. TITRE Canadian National Herse Show! Toronto, Ont, April 25th to 29th Round Trip Tickets will be issued at| $5.40 admission to : : Including one the | Horse Show, good going Tuesday, 3 April 25th, and good to retura until} Monday, May 1st For further particulars and sleep- ing cer reservations, apply to 1 . J. P. HANLEY, Agent, Corner Johnston asd Ontario Sts. | KincsTong PEMBROK © RAILWAY In Connection With CANADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAY. ------ Homeseekers To Western Canada ' Low round trip rates goo" April 18. May 2. 16, 80. June 183, 27. Tickets good to return within 60 days. Full particulars at K. and P. and C. P. R. Ticket Office, Ontario Street. 'Phone 50. F. CONWAY, Gen. Pass. Agent. BAY OF QUINTE RAILWAY. OR lunch, dinner, or on those occasions when good fellows get together, you can't find better ale than 1 has character, uni-- form purity, and an un usual deliciousness to its flavor. ORDER FROM RIGNEY and HICKEY, 136 and 138 Princess St. BREWED BY DOMINION BREWERY CO. Ltd. Toronto. [A Biskop ALLAN LINE Steamship Co'y, Ltd. OPERATING T WA FLEET OF ENG ET rAd HS ON THE 87. LAWRENCE ROUTE. SUMMER SAILINGS, Montreal to Liverpool ROYAL MAIL SERVICER. "Corsican" May ith, June 2nd wprkinian® May 13th, June Sth. nisian." May 19th, June 16th. fotorian™ May 26th, June 2rd. Montreal to Glasgow onfan" May 6th, June Ard. ramplan," Mary. 13th, June 10th. "Scotia" May 20th June 17th. "Hesperian" May 2th, June 24th Montreal to London One class (moderate rate). Steamers) ealling at Havre, France. For full particulars of Rates an Sailings, apply, J. FP. HANLEY, C 8 KIRKPATRICK GT. Ry. Clarence St. or : THE ALLAN LINE, 77 Yonge Street, Toronto, BIBBY'S CAB STAND "DAY OR NIGHT Phone 2v1 seee sesseses WM. MUKKAY., Auctioneer. Puroiture Sales given special ate tention. Country Sales of Farms Biock. etc, have bes the igh dobar my BT 8Q i OUR BEAVER BRAND Figur 1s unexocelled for bread or pastry Price is moderate. A. MACLERA htatio Street. For Health Drink McCarthey's Ale and Porter. best. Agent, R. J. LAWLER GASOLINE. COAL OIL. LUBRICATING OIL, FLOOR OIL. GREASE, ETC, PROMPT DELIVERY. W. F. KELLY, Clarence and Ontario Streets. Toye's Building. DOCTORS TELL HOW "CUTICURA" CURED SKIN DISEASES | One says, "| have Great Faith in Cuticura Remedies." Another, "They Always Bring Results." "1 wish to let you know of a couple of | recent cures which I have made by the use of the Cuticura Remedies, Last August, Mr, of this city came to my oflice, troubled get It's the about fifteen dollars WOMEN WHO SMOKE AND SAY "DAMN." : Oregon Prelate Alsd Wishes They | Would Stop Gambling and Cease Stooping to Vices of Men, : i Philadelphia Public Ledger . i Women who "smoke cigarettes, gamble for money and say 'Dam were solemnly adjured to recant their follies by Bishop R. L. Paddock, o Eastern Oregon, in his sermon recent ly in the Church of the Holy Trinity in Philadelphia. i The bishop had been speaking of the | timberjacks of the Oregon forests, ! men "blasphemous and flthy-mouthed, because, as the bishop said, they were | separated from the refining influences | of women's companionship. ' "Women," continued the slowly, "we men protest against your | smoking cigarettes, gambling for! money and saying 'Damn.' It reminds | some of us men of women and of co | ditions that we wish we could forget. | We wish you would try to help us by | living up to high ideals and. stan dards. With you up there we will al-| so yirive for those adeals, and through | you we may be lifted up to heaven. | "But don't, don't come down te oyf | level by adopting our little vices and | weaknesses." ; } The fashionable audience which filled | the auditorium was somewhat surpris- ed at the bishop's outburst and many | wondered why he should come out of | the wilds of Uregon to deliver such a! message to the society folk of Phila | delphia. | Bishop Paddock related many imier esting experiences of a preacher's li'e! in the North-West. He spoke of 'al service he conducted in "a sheep-hevl ing town, consisting of one store, two houses and two saloons." The "boys" | crowded around him with a volley of | questions, some of them excitedly | shaking their fists in his face. ! speaker i ters. They're all graiters," shouted | one. : | A brief period of silence followed this | outburst; then one of the timberjacks | addressed the bishop. | insult. Why don't you knock down | The bishop explained that he was not there to engage in fisticufis with any rough fellow who disapproved of | his profession, and went on preaching. | His sermon made some impression on | his rough-and-ready audience, because | at its --_--. the man who had called | all ministers "grafters" came to the front said : "I'm sorry 1 insulted you, sir. 1] witnt to say that I have been on the! wrong track, but from now on I hoje to stay on the right one." | Above the heads of the worshippers | at this unique service were two blood: | stained blankets, hung under the rait- | ers to dry. They had been wrapped around the bodies of two cattle 'thieves | who had been shot in the hill country the day before. "With ail their vices there is a noble trait in these men," said the bishop. "We can ouly interest them by do monstrating that we are men with red blood and passions like them- selves. They would ridicule a long- | faced preacher. The sermons that im- press them must have a steaight-from- | the-shoulder flavor that drives ths | truth home with language and object: lessons they cannot fail to under stand." SCIENTIFIC i | { | ! The Problems of Mind, Life, Gravita- | tion and Electricity. j A most remarkable state, condition! or pomt in mature, the absolute zero | of temperature, has been reached to | within three degrees. This is consid- | ered to be a great scientific achieve | ment. Hydrogen gas was solidified | into pure white ice, and this was em- | ployed in the process of cooling he lium, and all works of the hand of | man were surpassed. The temperature | sank lower and lower until a point only three degrees from absolute was | reached, but the obdurate helium did] not even liquefy. ! The imagination, however vivid, can not encompass what this intense cold | implies. It may be the death of the activity of matter--that is, a state of | rest 80 far as chemical reaction is cop cormed. Thus if the true zero of na- | ture can be reached it may obtain that matter will put on new aspects and | hitherto unknown' properties, or it | may expire, become chemically inert, | totally devoid of hemt and lifeless. { Sill even then the standing mystery | ever confronting man, always await- | ng explanation, gravitation, will act | > i i MYSTERIES, Nothing known can affect the uni versal attraction, forever directly as t, mass, whether hot or cold. However, the three degrees may nev- or be overcome, or, indeed, they may, for it is pow thougmt that science has no limits, ' 'the scientific mind being | capable of solving all problems--s, | saith some mentologists. The capital pro is first to dis | cover what mind is, them life, next! gravitation, next electricity, and reach | a climax in finding how it is that | gaseous masses glow and issue light | when existing in frigid voids at zery absolute. : There is no solution in sight for any ! of these perplexing problems and bar- assing. No progress whatever has | been made, in finding what mind is, mable to set up a train of reasonin ing his own or another's iy "His own" implies an owner, but no fact as to who this owner is has ever THE DAILY £ REBUKES| i St. { Church of St. {is hard pressed for "hands," "I'll tell you what 1 think of minis- lon it. "Say, pard," he said, "that was an | when him [in the case mixed. {claims upon us. | i Dave, SATURDAY. APRIL 82, 1011. ENGLAND'S HISTORIC ALE. UNWRITTEN LAWS. Traditions Which Have Almost Force of Statutes, Testimony Shows the Brew as Js. National Drink. the landers' law ad cannot become use. it approaches so mark that man dare it 10 the extent of pub- aiid declaring it as a part tive law. Haw ritien i must go oeca anger importance dicated in : subject | of. the sea down with his A write it into the ations dare mot -incor- Ir navy wr 'marine re- the Lirants of the sea | hi the and believe that to { Obey it betters their service, and there : of its being disre aw Hook books possessed by says, "were housed in Mary the Virgin Mary kind of uaiversity red character dic cellar from sum there, and compelling with their hands on t that they would, in so ability and haeman them, brew for the scholars good ana wholesome beer." A relic of the a » x Fraueo-I'russian war nearly the national beverage is seen in the | 'B Ae Ire v 3 ar 3 "heer Eo domestic servants ! four thousand officers of The German The castom of giviz ¢ this dates back, |3Tmy were killed and the great ma- to a time whe such gg |1OTity of them gave up their lives be- those of Burton, began to supersede | Cause they believed in this law of con- the private brewing: bs families, savs duct. . the London Chronicle oR Iu- obedience to this law Farragut bound himself to/the mast, Lee rode occasionally see an riisement : : for & butler who is competent to brew. | 1© the head of his charging column : and Lawton And the ale brewed according to old. | 2% the bloody angle, fashioned fosmuls and from malt | Walked coolly in front of the line and hop. is worth drinking, if and was shot in the presence of his can stumble across it, especially | M0. ; the "nappy ale," such as Chaucer des- The law of the right of revolution cribes. has been much talked about and much In time of harvest, when the farmer | Written about. Every intelligent eiti- and the | 7e0 believes that he has the right wa- strolling laborer ever, from Ireland is der certain conditions to oppose the at a premium, beer is thrown in. The established government of his own land hay harvester in Kent is allowed as | 20d join in an effort to establish au- much small beer as he wants, And | other in its place. Just prior to and he often drinks a lot. This writer hay | during the civil war there was much seen an Irish laborer in a Kentish | discussion in this country by learned hayfield drinking a gallon of beer | eR on either side of the right of re- before breakfast. Dut he worked well | olution and the "higher power" and the "greater law." The law justifying one person in the killing of another has required the serious consideration of every counm- try. Every criminal code provides certain punishments for homicids, and many of them graduate the punish: ment with minute parCiculars, accord- ing to the circumstance of the kill ing, so that any one of six crimes | may be involved in a single tragedy, law, taverners swear, nw of the army cor shall not shall not show person v Gospels far as 3 y | allowed their | Irauty bis time when aie was $s ® breweries, now we You Si -------------- Some ultra temperance peoples seem to think there are no other dissipa tons except the drink habit. Justice is quite likely to -miscarry you get sentiment and the law that having rn duty those Counting the cost is we owe ourselves and | Such codes also attempt to define what killing is justifiable and what is ex- cusable and with their interpretation by the courts attempt to describe the only conditions under which one hu- man being can kill another and not { be guilty of crime. | The Hebrew code almost stands Mrs. J. W. Pateman. 34 Harriet St. { alon# in its recognition of man's de- on.) in writing a ee % Food {sire to kill and his right to have Says "When I Sst knew cir of ror | that desire and that climax of all sa- friends, her baby Jack was eight months { tisfactions whirh comes to him who old and dying by inches. She Bae | under great provocation slays an- three foods becanse her Jack co ; | other, If is not at all strange that digest milk. At last, I fe jin this branch there should be an of Neave's Food | extended code of unwritten as written month, Jack was rapidly gaining fleshy { law, unwritten now and always to be and was bright and happy. He is a | unwritten for the reason that the re- lovely boy now and she declares Neave's | cognition given by its embodiment in Food saved his life. And it did. jthe statutes would be taken as a li- Then I recommended it to a {riend on j come by dishonest men and would re- 3 | A LOVELY BABY BOY This Mether is quits Enthusiastic | over & well Knewn Food. Victoria Avenue. She had a baby 6 | gult in harm rather than good. months old that was not thriving a bil It is an unwritten law among She put the baby on Neave's Food and i i at the end of three months, the baby | officers of the army. thet if a wil: twice the size | ordinate officer kills a superior offi- ' : {cer because that officer has publicly DR We oe Bp ger. stzvger { degraded him by striking him or by owe it all to Neave's Food. I have the { other action equally humiliating, then utmost faith in Neave's Food." { the courtanartial will not conviet, Mothers and prespectivs mothers may | During the Civil War, at Louisville, obtain a free tin of Neave's Food and a | Ny., General Nelson said to General valuable book 'Hints About Baby' by | Davis writing Edwin Utley, 14 Front Street 4 "How many men have you East, Toronto, who is the Canadian | General Davis replied : "About agent. For sale by all druggists. 24 [giving an approximate number. Nelson said: "You an army officer i the and say 'about !" Why don't ' you | 'know' how many men you have ¥'" and with that he struck Davis in the ! face with his glove. Davis shot and in Bedroom, Parlor and Sit- { killed him, and the court-martial ac- ting-room at usual- low [J [quitted Davis, prices. 1 D. A. WEESE & 00, | Picture Framing. Photos ! No Hard and Fast Rules to Guide the | Artist Mechanic. Chicago Record.-Herald, x i Violins are the most delicate and Tones and juvigamissthe whois uncertain of musical instruments to nervous system, Mikkes NY j make. There are no hard and fast Ain od ee ory. Deo. | rules to follow. It is like making a i | human voice, This quality differs { according to the wood, the seasoning {and the coustruction of the few parts NEW SPRING WALL PAPER. We are showing some dainty designs and colorings CREATING A VIOLIN. Wood's The Great Ewglis of 's. box, Oneill please. six Said by all droggists or mailed in | mat, , on of price, New pa Pre Wood Medicin Con : a ae Toronto, Ont. | The violin contains the fewest parts lof musical instrument invented, ad Effects six for any | and it seems like the simplest of them C * P : - {all to make. But, 'alas, it defies the age ain | expert, the practical mechanic and the 1t you want your Carriages to look | musician ! Anybody can make a vio and wear well, leave them with us | in but few can ke Children's carriages and go-carts ea- Q vith th Hill » quad piu, Smellnd Ih ail Ee Ua So, will he exception of compara tively few factory violins, most ol E. 3 DUNPHY, them are produced by individual in- | strument makers, who spend more Montreal and Ordnamee Streets | [ving care over them than a mother -- r---- ---- | does over her first child. A violin maker is an artist me- chanic, a sort of anomaly in this age | of machinery. With a pot of glue, a few shatp tools, a cabinetmaker's {benclt and a few sticks of wood he { will labor diligently in the creation of {an mstrument that may give forth | the sweetest, the wildest," the wierdest { and the strangest musical notes. He j will glue (his instrument together and { then take it apart twenty times to | adjust, the fraction of an inch, the | bass bar or the sounding post A creator of a violin may spend weeks fon a single instrument and then find, to his disgust, that it does not sa- | tisfy. The exact point whers the sounding post--a stick of wood only a little larger than a mateh--should be placed can never Le determined in advance. It is a mystery that ever recurs in each mew. violin. Then the wood is of wo much im- portance to the viel maker--none of our fresh timber nor kiln dried stuff, t must be seasoned by years, even by decades and centuries, Every time a century old house is demolished some musical maker is likely on the scene rake a quiet hid for some of in old rafters. To the povice this may seesn worthless, but the violin maker may find in this cen tury old timber just the wood for his beloved instruments -- The man apxions for an argumeng is willing to take either sifle of the ------ COMPARISON No.2 Mr lows : , of Brockville, writes a New York Life Insurance Company as "1 beg to ackmowledge receipt of your favor of the 3rd inst. enclosing statement of dividend on the premium om my policy in your Company. My annual premium is . ry on a policy of $5,000. The statement shows that the profit for the past year amounts to . ae a which is a little over 11 per cent. of my premium aud is certainly far beyond my anticipation. Just a Comparison v 50, The Polioy- nd at a premium = 88 PS The above is for a Twenty-pay Life as at a jrichena' Mutual Life will issue a policy 'of this or u wet_saving left in the policyholders' pocket, as compared with . the premium arged by this New York Co. of .ccooenn oo As this was left in the policyholders pocket at the beginning of Jear it was worth at least 5 per cent.to him or an additional .. which would have made his-gross saving, had he taken his policy with the Polieyholdirs' Mutual Life _....... cies srt ditties His dividend was . 3 senanaiis samakeuiivanin whmskakei mama ran His saving, therefore, had he taken his policy with the Policyhold- ers' Mutual, would. have been more than S0 per cent. more than the amount of his dividend from this New York Life Co. He states that the dividend was highly setisfactory. His saving would, therefore, have been SO per cent, more than satisfactory had he taken his Insurance with § The Policyholders' Mutual Life Ins. Head Office, Temple Building.;Toroate. Central Distriet--W. EF. MEGGS, Gananoque. Busters Distriet--M. D. CLINE, Cornwall. Balloville District--J. W. BOYD, Relleville. 0 WN a0 Sap't. Our rates have stood the test of over forty years' experience. Copy of Mr. B's letter may be seen at our office. DRINK HABIT All Craving and Desire Disap- pear in THREE DAYS What a terrible hold liquor must get on a man! THINK OF IT! U to the spending of his last penny and up to the taking of the last drink he will ever take--in spite of the busin ess-wrecks, character-wrecks and health. wrecks that are all around and about him as a resuly of liquor drinking he will declare that he is the ONE man whom liquor doesn't hurt and will flatly and indigmantly refuse to be cured of the habit. It if all due to al- cohol's delusive properties--it weakens the brain--the man canmot think for Hiuseli--his relatives or friends MUST see that he is eured. "THE TREATMENT THAT DOESN'T INJURE YOU" The Gatlin is a safe, harmless, convenivnt treatment to take. It con- tains not a cumulative, poisondus or deleterious drug. A child could take it. It has cured a boy of sixteen and a man of mwety-two---and it has cured eleven thousand others whose ages ranged between sixtern and ninety- two. It will do away with liquor erg ving im the case of your husband, your father, your brother--it will make a man of your friend, your employee, ot YOU, in just THREE CONSECUTIVE DAYS "of treatment. That is much time to spend on something that means so MUCH. The Gatlin Treatment--No Pay Unless Satisfied--No Hypodermic Injections There are no hypodermic injections to torture the ment is administered under a plain contract that results satisfactory to the patient or no charge. No pain or drawal of liguor--everything confidential. Home treatment cannot come fo the institute for three days Call, write or telephone for books of particulars antl other information not and treat be entirely with who Patient shall suffering, no for those ° . Telenor North 4538 Gatlin 428 Jarvis St., Toronto Institute A HARGRAVE, "For Tea You Can't Beat Lipton's" Here's Just What You Have Been Longing For-- Tea Perfection in a Perfect Package. LIPTON'S TEA Over 2 Million Packages Sold Weekly -~ - a - «>. > New Cocoanuts.. Pineapples, Tomatoes, Bananas, * Florida Grape Fruit, Navel, and Mexican Oranges. Sweet 16 Piss SL A. J. REES, rt on] The "go between" iT a sucress . Npeoudation should always be ! sidered From Jn actual wemth Stand: (Tar as trouble and mischief is point. jeerned. -

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