Daily British Whig (1850), 25 Nov 1912, p. 5

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Path MVR. PEE DAILY BRITISH WAIG MONDAY. NOVEMZER 25. 1912, sr e-- ST. ANDREW'S SERMONIA LIVELY BLIZZARD Now Ready ! Ralph Connor's New Book. | CORPORAL CAMERON ! OF THE NORTH-WEST MOUNTED POLICE. By Ralph Connot, Author of "Black Rock," "Sky Pilot," Glengary School Days." A Tale of the Macleod Trail. "CORPORAL CAMERON" will certainly prove to be Ralph Connor's masterpiece of fict'on and romance. Never before has the author had a more turesque and bappy subject, and in "CORPORAL CAMEROR" his countless readers and admirers will find a novel to inspire and to thrill and to satisfy. "Corporal Cameron' should be in every home. Handsomely bound, cloth. Price, $1.10 Copy. FOR SALE AT UGLOW'S 141 PRINCESS STREET Telephone No. 25. TT THE SOME GET OUR PRICES for Tin, Lead, Zine, Babbitt, Solder, Sheet Lead, Lead Pipe, THE CANADA METAL CO, Limited, ' Pactories~~TORONTO, MONTREAL, WINNIPEG. THAT TOBACCO With the "Rooster" om It is crowing louder as he goes along Only 4bc per pound. For chewing and smoking. AT A. MACLEAN, Ontario Street. TRY NOLAN'S Special Blend Of High Grade Coffee, 40¢ a Ib. kk] | Pringass Stiset, rom 120 THE QUEEN MILLINERY | regular $8, $10 and $12 Now $4, $5 and $6 0c, 76¢ and $1.00 121-2¢, 25¢, 35¢, 50c b0c, 76¢, $1.00, $1.50 i Dress gud Tailored Hats, - Untrimmed Shapes Ribbon Mounts ~ Ostrich Feathers in all colors, 76¢; $1.00, $1:50, $2.00 and $2.50 - . 174° WELL'NGTON STREET THE CANADIAN BANK OF COMMERCE HAS INSTALLED SAFETY DEPOSIT BOXES. LODGE YOUR » Wills, Tide Deeds, Mortgages, Insurance Policies : J¥ other valuables in one of these boxes 4 : a9 EF sin. + FOR FURTHER INFORMATION APPLY TO P. C. STENSON, Manager, NNGSTON, Otaric Em tepm-- 81 Smart Evening In Satin, colors' Pink, Blue. White and Black, handsome ame | B34, Setenta and Boul) gue, to 0d. Wree wrap 1... $200 to $350 | PREACHED BY REV. DR. MOR- GAN, OF QUEEN'S, To the Scotchmen in St. Andrew's Church on Sunday Evening--"l Know That My Redeemer. Liveth" Was the Subject. In spite of the wretched weathe: on Sunday evening a large congregs tion was present at the service ol Bt. Andrew's soclety in St. Andrew' church. Rev. William Morgan, D D., of Queen's university preached tc the society, he being its chapla:n, Dr, Morgan showed how the mind of a man, though beset with doubt» and reasonings, emerged by faith t the conclusion embodied in his text which he took from Job, "I know that my Readeumer lveth™ The speaker recited the way in whiel Carlyle, in hia Sartor Resartus, hac come out of the darkn and doub' which beset his early (raining. H REV. DR. WILLIAM MORGAN, The chaplaln of Kingston St. aAn- drew"s Soclety HELD FORTH IN KINGSTON ALL DAY SUNDAY. Six Inches of "The Beautiful" Fell ~Caused Much Trouble in Tele-' phone and Telegraph Communica | tionHard on Electric Light! System. { i Just as if he had walted till King: | ston had he: block pavements fin ished, the weather man let ga about i¥ix inches of snow on Sunday and imade the iraffic of churchgoers very unpleasant. Jt wai soft an. stieky underfoot. The snow fell Steadlly all Sunda; night, and the gray light of Monday morning showed a very pictur:isque scene, The bulldings were all cap- ped, and the ground covered with white. The trees and telegraph wires were weighed down with the snow, On the corner of Barrack and Ri dean streets, where the electric light wires entered a store, through = window sash, the weight of the jnow on the wires pulled the sash out. The telephons wired in many parts of the city were disconnected and the west trunk line, connecting Kingston with Toronto, was rendetec uszless for about three hours, many of the poles bethg broken with the weight of the snow on the wires. Treing moving in and out of the city worked with great diffienlty ané the wires betweon the stations along the K. & P. railway were broken in places, cutting off communication be tween some of the siations. The water in the harbor lay a7) and heavy, and has a most uninvit \ look for marine men. The storm did considerable dam age throughout the city. Many trees were blown down, and electric wires suffered considerably. On Princess street, near the corner of Division a large limb was blown off a tree, and fell across the street car track. The street car fervice ; on the Portsmouth line was tied up early on Monday morning. The eighi {o'clock ear coming to the city left ithe tracks at the asylum gate, dnd {three-quarters of au hour delay war {caused before it was replaced. { Peopls coming in over the King- has 'in this book a chapter called 'gion and Pembroke railway report "The Everlasting No," and directly {that the snow in that vicinity wu: Jollowing it ave entitled Tas Byes ia great deal heavier than it was in asting Yes. n e fir 2 tell ihe city. One man stated to a Whig of the doubts and denials that swepi Halal that the snow at in on his mind to overturn the early isharbot Lake was so heavy that if established landmarks of his faith. It 'was almost impossible to walk throw is the story of a soul from WhOR [wag almost Impossible: to walk God's face is hid. In the seconc chapter he shows how he' emerged into the light, and how his' eye: were opened to truths upon which he could stake his life, A somewhat similar experience i realized by Job. The book is pene trated through and through with doubts of the Almighty. Why dc the wicked prosper and why does calamity fall upon the good? Jol fs searching for God. That is Job': "Everlasting No.» It is not, how: ever, Job's final word. He comes ou! {of the trial with a faith firmly fixec 'and. in the face of all the yet uneolv- ed problems, he says, "I know thai 'my Redeemer liveth." That is Job's "Everlasting Yea." The Bible appeals to us as no othe" book. Men in the Bible question God's ways and suffer as we suffer. Critics say that evem Christ on the eross cried in weakness and doubt with "My Gé&d' My God! Why hast Thou forsaken Me?" But the Bible brings its answer, to the '"Everlast- ing No" In the grand affirmation, "1 know that my Redeemer liveth." You may look in vain for the rea- soning by moans of which Job arriv- ed at this conclusion. Job does not solve the problem by reasoning, A man who has very good reason for believing in God may have very little faith, and on the other hand, one who has no reason for his belief may have great faith, Jesus said, 'J thank Thee Father that thou haat hid these things from the wise and prudent and revealed them unt» babes." Faith is not the child of reason or argument. Of all the ways in which God re- iveals himself to man, Jesus is th: { greatest. He meets us. The lofty ideal, the purity of soul, the life and breath of Christianity is Jesus, He { represents the reality in which every {enjoyment has its origin. In the {face of all suffering, all sin, all mys- tery; in ths face of death itself, let ius be able to say, "I'know that my { Redeemer liveth." | At the close of the service the St. i8t. Andrew's society met in the lec- iture hall and passed a resolution thanking Dr, Morgan for his excellent discourse, and the management of St. Andrew's church for the use of the edifice. Ex-Cadet Hanitain, who graduated from the Royal Military College last veur. was a guest at the College over Sunday. & f=37E t =u sik #5 f 5 through it. | As a result of the storm, the else: (trie lights in the houses in the west iend of the tity went out, and caused ithe 'people a great deal of inconve- .nience. Coal oil lamps had to be brought into service. As soon a: the trouble set in, Manager Folger of the civic light plant was notified and he sent ont men to look after the necessary repairs, Owing to the (blizzard, 'which kept up all night, they could not get at the root of the trouble; although a dim light war furnished for the rest of the night. This part of the electric light sys- item appears to be very weak, ar in nearly every storm during the past year the lights im this portion of the e¢ity have been put out of business, At Hinchinbrooke the-snow was very heavy. Several sleighs were noticed around the city during the moraing. The l«nowfall in tho country was quite heavy too. A man drove in from the brick vards with a sleigh loaded with brick ifor Dalton & Sons' new wholesale ihardware. Owing to the storm, the work on this building, which was rushed last week during the fino weather, had tb be stopped. Sunday was a very bad dav for the mariners who happened to be 0 : ut. Citizens had their first tasts of snow shoveling on Swaday and M-n- Aav mornine, Yes there was a few who used their shovels and broom< on the Sabbath. If citizens won'd take a little more axersige of t%° kind the walks would be in a far better shape . for travelling. EASY TO PUSH DOWN A Man Because People Refuse to Believe in Him. In Sydénbham Strést Methodist church on Sunday evening, + Rev. Prof. George Jackson of Victoria col lege, Toronto, preached in scholarly manner to a goodly congregation. His theme was simple, "Salvation by Faith," but the English scholar im- pressively clothed his points in beau- tiful thoughts and appropriate illus- trations. basis of the professor's discourse was Ubrist's faith with the adultergus woman. The preachéd declared that it is so easy in a Christian land to push a man down hill, to rust the ex- convict, because wo refuse to believe in the genuineness of his conversion. It was written all over the life of Christ, Prof. Jackson said, that not only according, to. our faith are we saved, but "Christ sAved men by bo- lieving In them, loved them back from badness to rr Queen's Alumnae in Vancouver. Tha Queen's membership in the Women's University club of Vancou- ver, B. C.. bas this year been dou- bled by the addition of the following A. "097 Miss Jean *10, both of whom Braemar, a new in are on tho staff of ; Miss B.A 67, King Edward h Jessie J. MacKenzie, in the FOR MEN In Calf Blucher, leather lined Tan Calf, Bluchers and Buttons, cotton lined, ry nS 3 } $3.00 $100 $450 $500 $600 The latest style of course ABERNETHY PE FOR THAT CHRISTMAS PRESENT SOMETHING THAT HAS A LAST : ING EFFECT. ' Suitable, Durable and reliable, FANCY PARLOR OHAIRS and HALL SEATS, HALL MIRRORS. Your Purchases Stored. JAMES REID'S The Leating Undertaker. Phone 147 CERTAINLY ENDS STOMACH MISERY "Pape's Diapepsin" Relieves Your Indigestion in Five Minutes. Sour, gassy, upset stomach, indiges- tion, heartburn, dyspepsia; when the food you cat ferments into gases, and stubborn lumps; your head aches and vou feel mick and miserable, that's when vou realize the magic in Papels Yiapepein. It makes such misery van- ish in five minutes. If your stomach®is in a continuous revolt--if vou can't get it regulated, lease, for your sake, try Diapepsin. t's so needless to have a bad stom- ach--~make your next meal a favorite food meal, then take a little Dispeps in. There will not be any distress eat without fear. It's because Pape's Diapepsin "really does" regulate weak, out-of-order stomachs that gives it its millions of sales annually. © Get a large fifty-cont case of Pape's Dispepsin from any drug store. It is the quickest, surest stomach relief and cure known. It acts almost like ma- gic--~it is a scientific, harmless and pleasant preparation which truly be- longs in every home. THIEVES IN TWO CHURCHES. _-- -« Stole Coat and Gloves from Choris. 7 ters on Sunday, A thief is no respecter of persons, or places. While the service was on at Chalmers church on Sunday morn: ing a sneak thisf walked into the lecture room of the church, where members of the choir leave 'their clothing, and walked off with an ov. ercoat belonging to one of the male Atemberd of the choir. The theft wg not noticed until the service was over and the young man was abou' to leave for homo, and found that the coat was missing. . The door to the lecture room Is always left nnlocked, and it was a very eday 'matter for a person to go in, take the coat and get away. remarked by a member of one of the churches that while the Situs of the arfcles were si i {eraduates: Miss Winifred Girdler, M.| lonwings Bought VY. M.C.A. Tickets Here. Cc. N. . : {. Moir's Chocolates| French Cherries Wiiiped Greum i i SAKELL' Next to Opera House Phone Ss WHEN PEOPLE THINK OF GOOD BREAD They always think of "Toye's Bread." | Ring up Phone No. 467 and our de- liveryman will call R. H. TOYE & CO. KINGSTON PAPER BOX COMPANY (British Whig Publishing Co., Limited, Proprietors) Manufacturers of all kinds of Stiff, Folding and Fancy Paper Boxes, for Milliners, Tailors, Clothiers, Hatters, Furriers, Confectioners, Bakers, Druggists, Florists, Grocers, Dry Goods, Boots and Shoes, Fancy Goods, Hard ware, Stationers, Ete. Stock and Fancy Boxes of every description made to order Estimates Furnished. Office and Factory: King Street West 'PHONE 883 AND A REPRESENTATIVE WILL CALL, HOW IT ORIGINATED. Trains In Barly Days Carried Moe: casioned Habitants: 3 To the initiated the Grand Trunk's Wedding at Saskatoon, Sask. passenger. train between Montreal] At Saskatoon, Sask. on October and Brockville 13 known as the nick-[3ist, at 2 p.m, a quiet wedding name of the "'Mocessin Train," and|Was &olemtinized by Rev. C. W. light has recently been thrown by; Brown, Methodist minister, between sn old timer of Upper Canada upon | Eliza" E. Campbell of Clarendon, the origin of the expression He Ont, and John E. Martin, a pris states that the late Hom. D. A. Me.|pérous young farmer of Tuscola, Donald and his brother, Ranald Sand-|3ask, Aa the wedding march was field MeDonald were the contactors being played, the happy couple en for the bullding of the line betwaen jtered the parlor. of Mrs. Yorks. The the two poihts in question, which was brids wore white silk net waist, skirt finished, or at any rate sufficiently ito match. After the ceremony was advanced, for the operation of con-lover they left on the 11.45 train #iruction trains in 1854. The firastjamid cheers and good wishes of the regular train left Cornwall at that{groom's friends. When they arrived time early in the mornlug, réturn-lat Kindersley they were met by the ing from Montreal the same evening, {brethren of L. O. L. 2254, of which and as its passengers were then forithe groom hes held a high position the most part habitants with moe [for years, and were escorted to Mr, casined feet Ronald McDonald re jand Mrs CG. Perpett's, where an sn marked that it ought to be called]joyable evening was spent, music be ithe "Moccasin Train." The name, ing furhished by Kindersley band. tuck and the train remains the! They will take ap Sousekéaping the "Moccasin to this day. The asthor]iast of November. We all extend states that there have been several] our hearty congratulations. m---- other explanations, but that his is the only authentic one. breakfast favorite of millions of that can be

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