THURSDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1920. NOTICE Cleveland, Hyslop andl Humphrey Bicycles -- At Reduced Prices---- Bicycle Tires and Auto Traction Tread Covers. Special prices. See window display. Carpet leaning and Laying. H. MILNE 272 BAGOT STREET MATHIEUS SA 41013 OF TAR & COD - LIVER OIL Cong Colds, Grippe, Bronchitis, hooping Cough, Asthma, Etc. MATHIEU'S SYRUP is a sovereign tonic combining the curative properties of TAR and the strengthening virtues of COD LIVER OIL. Colds, when neglected or badly treated give rise td consequences of sucha grave character that you shonld not risk using inferion preparations. MATHIBU'S BYRUP fs the only genuine remedy whese see gutation has caused to crop up many imitations of doubtful value. ON SALE EVERYWHERE THE WHITE STORE WE HAVE IN STOCK FULL LINE OF CHOICE GROCERIES. FOR HAR VESTING: OVERALLS, SMOCKS AND LEATHER MITTS MILI. ¥EFDS: SBAMPSON FEED, BRAN, SHO RTS, MONARCH SCRATCH FEED. CREAM OF TH E WEST FLOUR. United Farmers' Co-Operative Co., Ltd. "CASH AND CARRX" 25 Brock Street Phone 14. DE LAVAL ALPHA THE EASIEST GAS ENGINE TO OPERATE AND CARE FOR The farmer wants an engine that is simple and reliable, that will do what he wants it to do without constant tinkering and adjustment. He gets such an engine when he buys an Alpha. _The Al- pha is at Qughly Yractical engine. It is designed and built to do its work day in and day out under the varying conditions it is called to meet on the farm. It is dependable'at all times. One big feature of the Alpha is its low fuel consumption, . whether you are using gasoline, alcohol or kerosene, the Alpha is a fuel saver, * DE LAVAL SEPARATORS F. M. CLOW 471 Princess Street Phone 1015w. i B "to-day requires the most careful con- sideration. You may also require expert _ advice as to the wearing qualities of certain | Cloths. ' After 35 years in the business we claim to be able to advise in this direction, It costs nothing to call and have a talk on Woollens with us, : 3 CRAWFORD & WALSH + Tailors Bagot and Brock Streets. | the {an dlarming No thoughtful person who has vi- sited Europe since the war has falled to return home without a warning | concerning the gravity and growth | of the present world crisis. All sorts of rem {ies and preparations are pro- posed, many of them hysterical and avsurd; and many wise and work- able. Most of the views that are baing expressed upon this subject are too geueral and too large. It is easier to tell what an argue "they" or "we" ought to do than. actually te inaa- gurate something practicable. It is time to wake up to the truth that whet the world, and this fav- ored land especially, requires to equip it for the present crisis is not comprehensive and governmental ia character; but that it is as old-fash- ioned as the New Testament. All that we need to consider, to make the country strong and fit for these critical days, is mirrored {n present Sunday School Lesson upon.the baptism and temptation of Jesus. Only by the preparation of the individual can the community be saved. A new spirit in men and women will buttress society against the tests which lle ahead of us. Like the Master Himself, all of us need a more than natural enduement for the supreme trials that our characters and our civilization are about to en- counter. ---- Facing Fundamental Facts, Our day is rich in schemes and the- ries, If intellectual astuteness could safeguard human welfare, so much of the horizon would not be dark and red. Whatever brains and wisdom can do is being done to re- construct the disintegrating Old World. Despite all efforts, the woe and welter are on the increase. This is no place to go into the de- pressing recital of what has befal- len and is befalling this old world of ours. "Each breeze that sweeps the ocean' brings tidings more omi- nous than the last. Here in the New World, too, there are a mults- tude of disturbing mani'estations. A recent magazine article enlarges up- on the agoalling increase of crimes, of embezziement; violations of trust, by old and young, educated and illi- terate. The quality of rrustworthi- ness, it declared, is diminishing to extent, Profiteering grows apace. Moral laxity is on the increase. We have not been able to stand up under the strain of phe- nomenal prosperity and war-pres- sure. All of which compels us to face the fundamental fact of life, which is wrapped up in a momentous ex- perience of Jesus, Temptation, fierce and formidable, is the inevitable lot of every person. To meet it, the in- dividual must be prepared im his own soul by an enduement from God imself. The thing cannot be ac- complished wholesale; one by one each life must be made ready for the test which, in the aggregate, may have such vast social consequences. A Peep at the Home Folks, While the general view of world- wide political and sbcial and eco- nomic conditions may be depressing, there is gnly cheer inva study of this Lesson, and of background condi- tions in our Christian land. The baptism and temptation of Jesus are filled with optimism for mankind. They tell of the way out. For .the Master won through to victory and Peace by no power or method that may not be His disciples. This Summer my travels have carried me into the homes of scores of average folk, in smaller commu- nities. What I have found has heartened and thrilled me. The eminent leaders of Christianity may disappoint one; but there is only en- couragement in the simple goodness and God-fearing faith of the plain- people. The salt of the nation are this uncounted and sometimes for- ERAT A ) A Ji; S TELLS SAFE, SIMPLE WAY TO T AND RELIEV E AT v HOME. If you have catarrh, catarrhal deaf- ness or head noises caused by catarrh or if phlegm drops in your throat and has caused catarrh of the stomach or bowels you will be glad to know that these distressing symptoms may be entirely overcome in many in- stances by the following treatment which you can easily prepare in ybur own home at little cost. Secure from your druggist 1 ounce of Parmint (Double Strength). Take this home and add to it 3 pint of hot water and a little granulated sugar; stir until dissolved. Take one tablespoonful four times a day. An improvement is sometimes noted after the first day's treatment. Breathing should become easy, while the distressing 'head noises, headaches, dullness, cloudy thinking, etc., should gradual- ly disappear under the tonie action of the treatment. of smell, taste, defective hearing and mucous dropping in the back of the throat are other symptoms which suggest, the PrOsSReS 4 of catarrh cy which may ov o this of- arto Sram 7, hi. al aearly ninety per cent. of all ear troubles are caused, by catarrh and there must, therefore, be many peo- ple whose hearing may be restored by this simple, harmless, home treat- ment, --Advt, 2 . THE DAILY BRITISH EQUIPPED FOR A CRISIS |The Ihaternational Sunday School Lesson for Qctober 10th is "The Baptism and Temptation of Jesus."-- Matt. 3: 1--4:11. By William T. Eills. gotten host of homes where life is animated by a desire to do the will of God. These unheralded Chris- tiang, who do not make public spee- ches or write to the newspapers, whose supreme ambition is to do what Jesus would like to have them do, are the bulwark of civilization, the hope of the world. Bible-reading patriots are the best guarantee of the preservation of our liberties. Would that every trou- bled and pessimistic leader of men and especially every Christian offi- cial, could go out into the country and meet them. It would hearten ev- ery city-spoiled man and woman to catch a glimpse of the countless | homes where love rules, where the | old-fashioned domestic virtues per- | sist, and where the standards of | Christianity are unquestioningly ac- cepted as the measure of life. | By Jordan's Bank. Somehow, it makes the Master seem more like ourselves--which was His constant desire--to know that | He joined the crowd of heart-hungry { ones who thronged to the Prophet of the Jordan to be baptised. Jesus id- | entitied Himself in every respect with us. "He was tempted in all points like as we are." He walked the common ways of life, seeking spiri- tual reenforcement even as we seek It likewise. Nor would He permit John the Baptist to dissuade Him from fulfilling all righteousness. It was His miss.on to tie Himself to the ordinary folk by every holy bond, ev- ery spiritual usage, every common experience. Though John thrust upon Him the argument with which so many of us beguile ourselves, that He was supe- rior to the ordinary needs of the ge- meral run of men, the Saviour waved him aside. | The example strikes straight home to the burning question of churen membership, Sabbath observance and the like, If the Lord went with the multitude into fellowship with. the divinest usage of His time, we may be sure He would be. found on the Sabbath worshipping in the house of God rather than "resting" on the golf-course, or bending over trashy literature. } By His baptism, there came to Jesus a fresh enduement of the Di- vine Spirit; and a special testimony to His character and His mission. He thus knew Himself in His high- est capacity when united with the people and ordinances of God. The Great Divide, So equipped, and in a state of spi- ritual exaltation. Jesus began His ministry---by meeting a tremendous, threefold temptation! Some very modern persons have eliminated the devil from their the- ology; but we cannot so easily get rid of him from life. He is a potent and present factor today. The evil that is rampant in the world, and that never ceases to kndck at the door of our own hearts, is no fancy or phantasm; it is a grim and dread reality, with which even the saint- liest spirits must dally reckon. It does np good to ignore an enemy: every one of us has to come to grips with the great adversary, even as Jesus did. And, like Him, by His power, we, too, may emerge trium- phant, Central to the story-of the tempta- tion of Jesus is the trugh that man is more than a body; he is a spirit. Material and sensual appeals fall in vain only upon the ears of those who oan say "It is wristen!" andwho know themselves allied with all the powers of the living God, Who so loved mankind that with every tem- ptation He has also provided a way of escape. LATE MRS, ISABELLA SCOTT A Devoted Member of the Standard Church of America, Sydenham, Oct. 5.--There passed to her eternal reward, at the King- ston General Hospital on Sunday, Sept. 26th, at 10.30 a.m., Mrs. Isa- bella M. Scott, widow of the late Al- bert Scott. She had been removed from her home in Sydenham four weeks previously. Mrs. Scott lived in that village for thirty-five years. De- ceased had an attack of the"flu" in Saginaw, Mich., last winter, while vi- |, siting at the home of her dughter, Mrs. Mark Packard, from which she never fully recovered. She was sev- enty-two years, six months, and twen- ty-four days old. The late Mrs. Scott was brought up in the religion of the English church, until about twenty-five years ago when she become soundly con- verted to God in the Holiness Move- ment church under Bishop R. C. Hor- ner, and connected herself with that denomination until Oct. 1918, when the Holiness Movement Church in Sydenham was taken over by Rev, A. T. Warren. Mrs. Scott, desiring to re- main true and loyal to the doctrines and discipline of her religion, and also under the leadership of Bishop R. C. Horner, severeG aer connection with the H. M. Church, and became a member of the Stand Church of America (Incor.) with her name on the roll of this society until she ans- wered her name to the final roll-call. She was well known and beloved on account of her kindly disposition and strictly religious principles. Her home was ever open to ministers and evangelists, many will remem- ber her kind 'hospitality. She was the mother of twelve children, eight of whom are still known to be living: Walter, Flint, Mich.; Thomas, Syden- ham; Charles, Kingston; Mrs, H Terry, Detroit, Mich.; Mrs. Mary Packard, Saginaw, Mich; Mrs. H. Culvert,' Royal Oak, Mich.; Mrs; E. Mouldey, Brownville, N.Y.; and Miss Margaret, New York City. The funeral was*-held from her be ved Al RTT ingston, on n v » to the Methodist Church at Syden- ham, at the request of the family, in- terment taking place in Sydenham cemetery. . WHIG. a A MEATLESS HOT PIE |i Another Use Discovered For Those Oxo Cubes. Here is a recipe calling for no than the pone Bo wl be found in the SR Storm Sash Don't wait until January, give us your / measurements now, Allan Lumber Co. Phone 1042, + Victoria Street ; A a 4 RE E122 slice sufficient potatoes TEs ple dish, add few CESAR wa qu a y one minute, then drain. Put back in pie dish with few slices of tomato, season with pep: and salt and flavour with herbs. Dissolve one Oxo cube in # pint of bot milk and pour over mixture. Put few bits of butter on top and bake for two hours in moderate oven. It's delicious. All dealers sell Oxo In tins of four, ten, and fifty cubes. ---- ° . $3 32 pl] Fo = H oH E ES = of E imparted | Tires at Sacrifice Prices f Goodyear Diamond Treads Maltese Cross. Dominion Ribbed Treads. Dunlop Tires. All guaranteed first quality Tires. y $21-Twenty-one Dollars On sale Fair Week Only. Get them while they last. VANLUVEN BROS. PHONE 1609. HERE are four of the very latest dance numbers and two of the newest and most popular vocal successes just released on three special "His Master's Voice" Records The Japanese Sandman Fox Trot . Silver Water Fox Trot Both Played by Raderman's Novelty Orchestra "His Master's Voice" Record 216208 - Avalon Fox Trot Hiawatha's Melody of Love Waltz (Intro. "Tired of Me") Both Played by Raderman's Novelty Orchestra "His Master's Voice" Record 216204 I'm In Heaven When I'm In , My Mother's Arms I'll Be With You in Apple Blossom Time Both Sung by Lewis James *His Master's Voice" Record 216208 All on 10-inch, double-eided--Price still remains at $1,00--WE PAY THE TAX. Now on Sale at any "His Master's Voice" dealers Manufoctured by BERLINER GRAM-O-PEONE €0., LIMITED, MONTREAL. : 20154 4 " Sh ES ? 158 Princess Street. ent Victor ctrolas Phone 301). F. W. COA (Jeweller) , ddd ~ a hubba el § ~ MAHOOD BROS. | Agents Victor-Victolas. 113 Princess Street. ¥ hot Weare always P eased to Secsonetin Victrolas and Victor Records CF HARRISON CO. LTD, 229-231-233-235-231 Princess Street. Phone 90.