af 3 5 <i ME. oe 5 & $ certain ir bles 2 colds acl toxin smi iatnals Peps is the discovery! » tablets, containin | ingredients, hb. nr the tongue, immedi- rn into vapour, and are at once ed dowp the air passages to the On their journey, they soothe wed and irritated mem! nchial tubes, the delicate wall vir passages, and finally enter and carry relief and healing to the lungs. In a word, po liquid or solid can get to the lungs and air passages, these Peps [mes get there dirdet, and at once commence their work of hea FREE TRIAL Cut out this on wees 0riicle, write across it the name ad date of this paper, andmail it (with lc. stamp to pay return postage) to Peps Co. Toronto." A free trial padket will then be sent you. All slruggists and stores sell tps, Ede. box. "THOMAS COPLEY Telephone 987. Wanting anything done Tn the © ne tery line. Estimates given on nll kinds of repa rs nnd mew work) also hurd wood floors of al kinds. All orders will. receive prompt attention. Shop 16 Queen ntreet. ~ Te A SST Feed Your Poultry Purina Baby Chick Peed Purina Chicken Chowder Purina Scratch Feed More Eggs apd Cturdy Ohicks. For Sale By n't you feel like g Peps eertain Ww when places ateiy t breal lung D. Couper. 841-8 Princess Street, Phone 76. SheN bie Rev MEY, ble gulating Fill for Women. $5 a box or threefor ge Sold at all Dg Stores, or mailed to.auy dress on receiptof price. Tre So ? Co. Bt. Gatharine Ontario. : 9 USL, DIT PHOSPHONOL FOR MEN. Vio: s Vim and Vitality: for Nerve and Brain; incresses "grey matter'; a Tonle--will bufld yon up. $8 a box or two for $. at drug stores, or by mail on receipt of price. * Tus SconeLy Drua Co., St. Catharines, tario. "Sold at Mahood's Drug Store." "Ranks with the Strongest" HUDSON BAY Insurance Company FIRE INSURANCE ' * | PERCY J. QUINN, s Branch. Torents W. H. GODWIN & SONS AGENTS, KINGSTON, ONT. ® Relieves. © ATARR Hof ; the | BLADDER ¢ 4 4 ai ATER THE SEASON'S GREETINGS To our many patrons is our sincere wish. Our stores are well stocked with choice gro- ceries and meats of all kinds for the New Year. C. H. PICKERING, 490-492 Princess St Phone 530 License No. 8.2153 Bags Wanted A. SPEIZHEN clean Sugar Bags, / Positively highest prices | : with Ferrozome, 50 ; per box, or six for $2.50. Get it to-- : . i "Barth's crammed with heaven, 'lachieved manhood and : laney of spirit and vigor ed' are sadly ling. Parents : cay fate hat growth, | Ve ent of her BACK FROM. THE BUSHES. THE DAILY-BRITISH WHIG, THURSDAY, JANUARY 9, 1919. By William T. Ellis. I'he International Sunday 12th is Israel," | Lesson for Jan. 3 the Leader of 3:1-4:117. -- NM ) | Despite the fact that a few un- taught pacifists are now lifting up their voices to tell us how to run the warld, the lesson has "really been learned by mankind in the war that safety is not first; that pain is not the worst peril; that death is more desir- able than dishenor; and that 'the { right is more precious than peace." { Craven consideration for the carcass, which is the essence of pacifism, has been repudiated by our gallant sol- diers, who loved honor and duty and patriotism and righteousness more than the prolongation of their own | existence We are in a mood to study about Moses, the first patriot who dared to | strike a blow for the sake of the op- | pressed When Moses, palace-train- | ed, but a Hebrew ¢p the last drop of | his blood, saw an Egyptian smiting a Jewish slave, he did the natural, | manly, and chivalrous thing, and {felled the tyrant with a blow. Evi« { dently, in his princely training, Moses { had not knowr*the sufferings of his | people. When first he came face to { face with the plight of the poor, all his noble manhood surged up in pro- | test. The simple explanation for | the comtinuance of many wrongs in the earth is that the exempt and fa- vored féw have not really known or felt them. Wise with the wisdom of Moses is the young man or woman twho invests his or her life inthe ser- | vice 'of the unfortunate, and makes common cause with the masses. : Right at the outset Moses found {the disheartening condition which ul- { timately drives every fadist and shal- | low sentimentalist. out of benevolent activity. The persons. - whom he sought to help did not appreciate him. When he intervened between two quarreiling Hebrews, they scorned him apd betrayed him as the slayer of an Egyptian taskmaster. That | was a hard blow for the patriotic ar- {dor of the young reformer It was \a bitter discovery. Many. persons have felt exempted from further charitable service because they have found that not all Belgians are grate- 1; that some Armenians are unwor- thy; that there are importers among the S¥rians; that certain Ottoman Greeks are capitalizing their misfor- tunes; that the poor geherally are unappreciative .This is shallow think. ing. If help were to be given only to the wholly worthy and. thankful, philanthropy and reform would cease "God is kind to the evil and the unthankful.' Moses, like most of us, had a hard time learning how to be patient with the provoking peo« ple 'who did 'not deserve his service. Exodus Knights for New. Days. Qur.day has arrived at the Moses mood, of quick, hard blows at popu- lar evils. He rode forth 'righting wrongs. His attitude toward all in- justice. and oppression was that of the knights of the new day. All the world is waking up to the conviction that wrongs are not -to be endured, "but to be remedied. Patriotism ex- presses itself in fearless champion- ship of all who suffer. We have seen shining examples of zeal for their own countrymen, and for the universal liberty, by the Czechs and | Rumanians and Slavs who are in ex- ile from their homelands. of the Moses type. This passion for human rights; which has made Moses a vital factor in our~own day, and caused his laws to be the buttress and hope of liberty everywhere, has come to new power sinee the war Millions of soldiers have had long, long thoughts con- cerning it; for it is the cause to which they devoted their lives. In the recent remarkable celebration at Philadelphia of the signing of a De- claration of Independence by the Middle Buropean nations, when a new Liberty Bell was unveiled, a Jewish speaker reminded the péo- ple that the message of the bell, and of the cause, came from the law. of Moses--"Proclaim Liberty through- They are Leut. the land. and unto all the inhabi- tants thereto." Nobody can have an "intelligent zeal for liberty with. out acknowledging hig debt to Mo- ses. Tranquility. is no longer a goal bf life. Soldiers have taught us that truth's tumult is better than error's ease. Moses would have missed life had he remained in the palace; he success by striking a b'ow, an audacious, risky hlow, for freedom. The . persons Nearly Every Girl: Can Make Herself Pretty and Attractive SOME WHOLESOME = TRUTHS EVERY GIRL SHOULD THINK ABOUT. Probably yon know just such'® rl = g Perhaps she is sixteen--good to look at, and pretty--quite interest- ing because she reflects the graces and charm that give promise of h piness to herself and others. But she is mot stropg.- The color in her cheeks, once so rosy, has faded away ---her eyes are listless--the buoy- friends, this girl needs it that her newed----neads it to res may be re ore the nerve ly' ' J which vill ore her color © ir ® energy---give Htness to whose chief fear is that. they may be unpopular or uncomfortable 'have not much standing in the world to-day Timorous shrinking from. criticism gets' scant respect or consideration. In these times we award all palms Fto the fearless champions of convie- tion, who are willing to affyont, tra- dition and convention, if ohly they may help make and ¥eep the world free. There dre two classes:of peo- things, and the many who talk about those who do things As we stand ug learn the great lessom of courage for righteousness' sake ----ie | "Into the Desert. : British military railways now thread the desert that/stretches be- tween the palace home| of Moeses and the tents of Horeh to which he fled, when he learned that he was known as the %layer of the Egyptian. Dr. Friley made the flight in an aero- plane from Cairo te Jerusalem in four hours.. Ere these words are printed 'I shall be well on my way to Palestine, 'for 'a last look at: Bible times; before ¢ivilzatipn effaces them forever. The desert dgd 'its splen- did thonght-¢ompelling : fsolation is doomed. - Instead, I suppose we shall retreat for meditation to the distant heights above the clouds. It. does seem as if a_.great desert experience is essential to every man with a great work to do. Moses.was gent off into this school of seclusion, deprivation and meditation. John the 'Baptist. So. was Jesus So was Paul, 'There they all learned how non-essential are most of the things that. civilization prizes; how essential are the things of the spirit. . A_.tent may be a more royal abode than a palace. France has heen, in some respects, a desert of experience for our sol- diers. They have arned in the army that a man's 1ife consists not in' the things he' possesses. There existence has been stripped to the elementals for them They have achieved their sublimest heights without any of the comforts of home or conventional Hving. Luxuries or even conveniences are not essential to great living. The First Lesson From the Trenches. Nolan Rice Best, editor of The Continent, returned from France with this sense of superiority to hard- ship as his figst impression. "No man is yet a free soul who imagines that he has. to be comfortable in or- der to be happy. To millions of Americans the recent war ' has brought the blessing of deliverance from that illusion. They have learn- ed how possible it is to be happy though inconvenienced. ! "From paintless barracks, sheet- less cots and linenless mess halls on this side of the Atlantic, our. sol- diers have passed to three-layer bunks and swing-shelf tables packed with suffocating space economy inte the holds of ocean transports bound for France, Landed dn the other side of the ocean, they have learned from lessons in scaling down life's necessities as they tramped intermins able distances under enormous pack- loads along stony highways, rode far ther yet by rai' in freight cars shared often with their battery horses, took both the heat of the sun and the drench of the clouds without protec. tion from either; and under the inefs fectual shelter of pup-tents camped in the open fields, now smothered with dust and again submerged In 1 quid mud. "Still beyond all this they caine to their weeks and weeks of trench duty, where even a dream-of cleanlis ness was possible only in wild deli: rium, where escaping the intimate company, of vermin was a far greater miracle than escaping the shell-fire of the Han, and where the acme of good fortune and luxury was a chance to squat on the earth floor of some Stygian dugout and eat one's dinner of 'slum and spuds' out of a battered tin pan. . "Counting out battle risks alto- gether, and all the hideousness of mortal conflict, man to man, it yet remains true that war relentlessly stripped from these fine-grained and finely nurtured practically "every shred of outward amenities which had been supposed civilization. "But did these young gallants find Tite intoleraBte® when its facile con- veniences and its pleasant indul- gences thus disappeared? "Entirely otherwise; life under these sterile conditions daily took on for them ampler meaning as its rinds 'were husked off and they came near- er and nedrer to the core of it. "They found themselves happiest when they 'possessed least. 'ment in 'defying obnoxious ¢ircum- stances will afford men new courage "The man who would smite an old favorite threat: quiet, we will Fob you of your living.' "But the soldier who has fought overseas will surely answer: ¢annot frighten me that wiy. "In France 1 learned .to live without a Tiving.' r------ thoughts. All 'desert. peoples A philosophical. ..Dwe'lers 'in the fa ces the seas and the sands, h and vivacity to her spirits, In Pen! 'day from any dealer in medicing. x " Cl ple in the world: The few who do" with Moses, (God's fighting man, let | S6 was and; young Americans to constitute the peculiar boons of "Most of all, this wartime experi- to disdain an unfriendly world war- ring against their-conselences. * abuse and cry down an evil creed is always answered by the world's one 'If you don't keep 'You PAGE ELEVEN Wednesday? . » . The Tie That Binds HE. influence of music in the home cannot be overestimated. Think! Wouldn't every member of the family insist.on being home if Alice Neilson was going to sing in your parlor next The most important wouldn't 'keep them away. mri event you can think of Alice Neilson will visit-your home--not once, biit every evening on your Celumbia. She, or some other famous singer, will sing your favorite songs, may be fond of Creator's Band, Mary may have a friend in France a little Billie would just love "Little Red Riding Hood." The long winter evenings have no dread for the family which owns A COLUMBIA GRAFONOLA the lack of entertainment at home has been a source of h lved many a father's problem, as it will for you. ahs y P d ask for Mr. Johnston, In the past: possibly worry to you. The Columbia | b Tomorrow you will be passing our store--drop in an who will show you the different styles and give a thorough demonstration of the Columbia LIMITED Grafonola. Come in any time. "THE J. M. GREENE MUSIC CO., The Home of Good. Music 166 Princess St. : : : : Tot Stores at Peterboro, Belleville, Lindsay, Etc. but that isn't all. Charlie nd long for military Music, You can please them all. Kingston And every common bush afire with God: But only he who sees, takes off his shoes, The rest sit round blackberries." Everything io Jite Hangs on "If" hooks: ~ WM. Moseshadenot been alert and of an investigating - turn he would never have hbard the Voice in the bush calling his. own name. Lo, it was Jehovah,. revealing Him- self te this doubly-drilled deliverer, trained in Egypt's face, the shepherd- statesman heard his own ¢comutission to save Hebrews from Pharaoh. God accredited Himself as the cove- nant-keeping One--which should have been credentials sufficient for Moses, too. "I ean stand anything that any- body else can stand, and I can do anything that anybody else can do," quietly said a traveller to a friend, in explanation of his success in over: coming hardships. Moses lacked this confidence; but he became dis- loyal when he'distiusted God. When the Lord says "Go" it Is ao time to respond, "Who am I?" The only answer to such a command is the first made by' Moses, 'Here am I." God's greatest servants have ever been those who developed the habit of saying 'Here am I" to His calls-- even when they are a summons back from the bushes and desert to the palace of Pharaoh. it and pluck "If by a still small voice He calls, To paths that I'do not know, I'll answer," 'Dear Lord, with ' hand in. Thine, I'll go 'wheré you want me to 80.' my A Shepherd's Duel With a King. Equipped by his providential expe- riences, and by his call, Moses reluc- tantly--too reluctantly -- assumed the task of leader of Israel, to de: liver them out of captivity. long conflict with Pharaoh, until by at last, are told in the Lesson Text. One of the wonders of the conflict was the simple fact that a shepherd the mighty king of Egypt. By a way he knew not, Moses had been led to a place of world leadership, such as he conld never have attained had We remained a palace favorite. God seems to léad us a long way around to our dearest goals, perhaps to teaeh us to know.our Guide Forlorn as was the cause of Moses and his enslaved countrymen, it nev- ertheless won. We are living in the day of the triumph of forlorn hopes, which five years ago seemed quite as desperate as the case of the Israelites. Sometimes we think that we. must pinch ourselves to make sire that we are awake and not dreaming . Behold, after centuries, Bohemia is free, and Poland. The cruelties of the Germans, and of all other nations, te the blacks of Cen- tral Africa dre ended. Turkey's tyranny has been completely broken, and Armenia, . Syria, Arabia, the Druzes, aud. all the other little sub- ject peoples have been delivered. 'Phe small nations of Middle Europe are now free from ancient yokes. Slavery is gone. The liquor power is going. Child labor has had ita shackles. broken. Verily, this is the day of jubilation for forlern hopes, Now we wonder who of the men returning from France. freed from old fears and conventional limita- tions, will ba.thg new followers of the example of Moses. £0 lead mankind fato still larger liberty, spiritual as well as physiegl. Has some Paul or Whitefield or" jer or Moody been in training in the tesnches? In this high hour of history and opportunity who 'are to be God's chosen libera- tors? : 3 New Opposition Leader. London, Jan. 9 --William W. Ad- 'amson has b elected Chairman of he Labor Jand thus becomes Opposition in the 8, succeeding Mr. at position. Mr. Ad- amson is a Scotch miner, who has worked for twentyseven years in the mines, a "He bas," says.The Times, h 0 { : ni ; Rnliy 4 om ay His i, the argument of the plagues he won | from the desert was arrayed against |f Tae] SYRUP. OF TAR & COD - LIVER Oli Couths, Colds, Grippe, Bronchitis}; ' hooping Cough, Asthma, Etc. 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