Daily British Whig (1850), 4 Nov 1920, p. 4

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wi THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, | spirit arg still far in advance of our most radical and reasonable and righteous utter for our: times. A host of loose-thinking persons ap he R THE NEW TIMES Sy itis THE BIG IDEA F NOSTAILS AND HEAD mr | . i Perroting the idea that Russia ig | ' Another ! ki Says Cream Applied In Nostrils | fording the most "advanced" teach: | A " ? - Reileves Head-Colds at Once. } ing for civilization. Nonsense. Thé | : | The International Sunday 8c hoo! Lesson for Nov. 7th | very thing that ails Russia 18 thet | : an Beran peti Loa, " » . ai A . les of Christian Liv ing." -- Matthew 6:19:33, its latest theories: are impregnated | : ; I your: nostrils are clogged and| Princip 3 y ts la theo: ar By William T. Zilfs. : Noh the sid and gutwors doginas of From the NEw Roy \L Cook Book | Cream sh , your head is stuffed and you can't | hate and cruelty and selfishness and | surprise romp in, hungry as and wellebeaten a smn ES Little children all over the world | &, in many languages, HEN the children read that sweet lor t are at present studying. the catarrh, just get a small bottle of f Russia, like the rest of the world, | He gazed septic cream {ato your nostrils and } attitude and motive, wherein the 3 i wholesome, economical de- : sage of your head, soothing and heal- | When Jesus was here among men, | Of the fair, straight, misty, dream- ' f his troubled earth Is into | message for this trou : ppt sed muffin tin let same satisfy the most ravenous icing. flowers He Orange Cakes breathe freely because of a cold or classconsciousness and tyranny: Ely's Cream Balm at any drug store. | Straight down into the startling blue - . , \ will have to move forward 'to the 1 3 Apply a little of this fragrant, anti- | Jesus-standard of a new spirit and' well and add milk | "I think when I he fair, turquoise mid-sea of the young bears, here are some let it penetrate through every air pas. , story of old, plain, love of man and the law of God. will d un ) ¢ a io a : i ly be th, 8dd vaailla, Put one ing the inflamed, swollen mucous | yy 0 He took little children, like | like, violet wall have free sway. The most modern lights haz wil sot oily 2 tablespoon of Daiter membrane and you get instant re- | lambs to His fold, | Of Moab-lo, how close it looms! The nothing else than the Sermon on the received with glee, 1 : and ; | '1 should like to have been with | spe ' Motor which the Sunday Schools : 3 bake in moderate oven about Ab! how good-it feels, Your mos- Him then." y | Quick human wonder struck His holy | b ats appetite in a most-whole- 30 minutes. Cover with bolled trils are open, your head is clear, no | | vision, more hawking, sfuffling, blowing: no | Age does not outgrow the longing | About these feet more headache, dryness or struggling | thus €¥pressed in' childhood's hymn. | knew, sp well, 0 have seen Jesus, to have heard | Back where the city's shadow slow- wp for breath. Ely's Crefm Balm is just | what sufferers from head colds and | His voice, and to have touched His ly climbs An Old Message For New Times. Has anything been written within the past five years upon our present problems that is more pertinent and i dd searching and up-to-the-minute than teaspoon grated nutmeg gg ; todny ns Royal Baking { would have been! This same yearn- | teaspoon vanilla extract or a N eatarrh need, lis a delight. hand--what supreme privilege that | There is a wood of Olives gaunt and | pligrims to the Holy Land; and that o {draws throngs to every lecture upon | the sacred scenes; and makes profit- : | ion pictures dealing with who is a mechanic should | able mot n a cll his gehunle should ! the theme of the life of Christ. Every strong, his brains must be Working | Teverent iayoiley shares well, his whole make-up must be in | 3 t 1 > the pink of condition. Vital Tab- | $XProssed it hls poem, lets, the Frenoh Remedy, will put 2 you there, you will feel better all over. (Get a box to-day. Price 50c¢. a box, 6 for $2.50. The Scobell Drug Company, Montreal, Que, Sold in Kingston by Mahoed's Drug Store. i "In Pales- "At last the very land whose breath He breathed, The very hills His bruised feet did climb! This is His Olivet; he stood, |As 1 do now, and with this same Biliousness Means too much bile left In the blood by a deranged x liver. Dr Chase's Kidney-Liver \ Pills set" the liver right and \ We are sure we have just what biliousness and headaches dis- 1 you were Jooking for in Antique \ appear. One pill a dose. i Furniture whether Ry 25¢. a box, all dealers. | --PIANO § a es (CHAIR { BUFFET BED or SOFA, etc. We buy and sell all kinds of new and used Furniture. We'll bg pleased to have you 1. LESSES Antique Shop 507 PRINCESS STREET Corner Chatham Street on this Mount Antiques A Specialty A Kidney Remedy Kidney troubles are frequently caused by badly digested food which overtakes these organs to eliminate the irritant acids formed. Help your stomach to properly digest the food by ive 15]to 30 drops of Extract Roots, sold as Mother Seigel's Curative Syrup, and your kidney disorder will promptly dis- pp Get the genui 7 REMOVAL NOTICE | Comore . . . || rrrerrertriesert rire riers Robinson&Wiltshire | 3 = =, xov sans nx WITH HEAD NOISES Auto Repair Shop is now located tion a trial---Advt. | At MARTIN'S GARAGE Ehbb db bbbb itl PRA E EIRP P ER ' If you have roaring, buzzing noises in your ears, are getting hard of hearing and fear Catar- rhal Deafness, go to your drug- gist and get 1 ounce of Parmint (double strength), and add to it 34 pint of hot water and a little granujated sugar. Take 1 tablespoonful four times a day. This will often bring quick relief from the distressing head noises. Clogged nostrils should open, breathing become easy and the mucus stop dropping into the throat. It is easy to prepare, costs little and is plea- sant to take. Anyone who has Catarrhal troublés of tho ears, is hard of hearing, or has head PHONE 1192vw, Angrove's Repairs Bicycles, by Carriages, Lawn Mowers, ete. We Seales, Talking Machines, de rep work right and guarantee », IY WELLINGTON STREFT The Advantage of our Patent Coupling on Bob- sieighs Is a surprise to ail drivers. It will pay you well to Nee our Sleighs before buying, McNAMEE & SLACK HORSESHOEING AND GENERAL REPAIRING Phone 1217w. 54 Queen St. | | i : 110 CLERGY STREET A A A itt All kinds of work promptly at. SA tended to. oT] Ql W. H. STEVENSON HORSE SHOER sad BLACKSMITH. Waggons and Trucks Repaired. Prices moderate, TEMPERANCE HOTEL YARD QUEEN STREET. SATARR MEIN stivber 24 HOURS ni fF) Bewareof so If a man empties his purse into his head no man can take ft from him. An investment in knowladge always Days the bést interest, een NO ONE IS SURE How Safe His Tires Are Unless MAXOTIRED { THE HOME OF THE MAXOTIRES _ ;.: 284 ONTARIO ST. Phone 2050. i es = Is Ordering Sui "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 CRAWFORD & WALSH Tailors : Bagot and Brock Streets. = the emo- | Richard® Watson Gilder | i] He closed His eyes, in | E i = be = i gray And centuries old; it holds the name it bore | That night of agony bloody | sweat. I tell you when I looked upon these fields And stony valle ple veil | Of twilight, or what time the Orient and ys--through the pur- sun | Made 'shining jewels of the barren | rocks-- | Something within me trembled; for I { said: | This picture once was | His eyes; | This sky, that lake 1 loveliness, { To Him familiar were; this is the way | To Bethany; the red anemones Along yon wandering path mark steep road | To green-embowered Jordan. | His: | These leprous | piteously; | This troubled | then as now, {And wild and bloody, --this is His | own land 1 On such a day, girdled same hills, Prest by His dark-browed, sullen, Orient crowd, | On, yonder mount, crimson blooms, mirrored in , those hills, this the All is outcasts pleading country,--troubled by these spotted with that dark tragedy | Which mortal spirit never dared to | sound, O God! I saw those Ey throng." es in every | | | All study of Christ's teachings is a struggle to get through the con- ventionalized, familiar language back {0 the reality of the Person and the | message. Once we share the poet's glow, and his experience, we are far on. the way to an apprehénsion of the living force of the words of the Master. They are not a mere calen- dered "Lesson" to be conned, part of the rote and ritual of religion; | they are the flaming, all-alive mess- age of the warm-hearted Deliverer | of our day, the present Christ Who is | the twentieth century's one supreme | Hero and Hope. What He has to | say, in His great Kingdom Utter- | ances, is as vital and urgent and contemporaneous as if it had never been spoken before. ---- The Vine on the Housetop. | Upon the occasion of one of my | vigits to the Church of the Holy | Sepulchre in Jerusalem last year, 1 | was of a specially honored party | Who were guests of the Greek monks | | Who are attached to the church. So We were especially conducted over the whole structure, including the attached monastary of the Orthodox church. As travellers and students know, thig ancient pile that has clus- tered around the 'reputed tomb of our Lord is a huge conglomeration of buildings. Walking on the high roof of the Chureh of the Holy Sepulchre I was Interested to observe &n old and huge grapevine, furnishing an arbor for the monks and bearing its fruit in season. Upon inquiring I learned that the vi for it has its roots in the original soll far down by the dark and crowd- ed Church of the Holy Sepulchre; but that it comes up, through pass- agaways and crevices, to the sun- light of the roof where its fruit ripens and is gathered. That extraordinary persistence of plant life amid adverse conditions is a notable horticultural incident, even apart from the sacred associa- tion of the plant, To me, the vine typified the Message of the Master, Its roots are far back in the soil of Galflee;" but its strength has sur- vived the centuries, and all manner Of untoward cofrcumstances; and it is to-day bearing its fullést and rich- est -fruit-in the sunlight of our own day. The nourishment that this gen- eration needs is not to be found in any new-grown plant of a season; but in the Vine of Life, Whose fruit is for the healing of the, nations. Not "back to Ohrist" is the cry for the hour, but "Forward - to Christ!" For His teachings and His - "They WORK while you sleep" Do you feel bilious, constipated, headachy, upset, full of cold? lone or two Cascarets to-night for your liver and bowels. Wake up with | head ¢lear, stomach right _ breath | sweet and feeling fine. No griping, no inconvenience. Children love Cascarets too. 10, 25, 50 cents. ne is a remarkable one, | and hocumes 4 master, then Jesus ay the following extract from the In- augural Address of Christ, which ig the present Sunday School Lesson ? 1 quote from Weymouth transiation: 'Do not lay up stores: of wealth for yourselves on earth, where tho moth and wear-and-tear destroy, snd where thieves break in and steal Put amass wealth for yourselvas in Heaven, where neither moth nor wear-and-tear destroys, and Where thieves da not Rreak in to steal. For where your wealth is, there also will | your heart be, "The eye is the lamp of the badg. | If then your eyesight is good, your | whole body will be well lighted; for {if your eyesight is bad; your whole | body will 'be dark. If, however, the | very light within you is darkness, how dense must the darkness be! "No man can be the bondservant | of two masters; for either he will] { dislike one and like the other, or he | Will attach himself to one and tHink | slightingly of the other. You con- | not be the bondservants both. of God jand of gold. For this reason 4 1 | | 1 | charge you not to be over-anvyious | about your lives, inquiring what you | are to eat or what you are to drink, | not yet about your bodies, Inquiring | what clothes you are to put on. Is | | not the life more precious than its | | food, and the body than its cloth-| {Ing? Look at the birds that fiy in | the air; they do not sow or reap or | Store up in barns, but your Heaven- | {ly Father feeds them; are not you | |much greater value than they? Which |of you by being over-anxious can | add a single foot to his height? And | { Why "be anxious about clothing? | Learn a lesson from the wild liljes. Watch their growth. They neither toil nor spin, and yet I tell you that not even Solomon in all his mag- nificence could array himself like { One of these. And if Gad so clothes the wild herbage, which to-day dour- | ishes and to-morrow thrown into [the oven, ig it not muck mors cer- tain that He will clothe you, ye men | of little faith? Do not be over- | anxious, therefore, asking 'What shall we eat ?' or 'What shall we | drink?' or 'What shall we wear?' for all these are questions that Gentiles | are always asking; but your Heaven- | ly Father knows that you need these | things--all of them. But make His:| kingdom and righteousness your | chiet aim, and then these things shall all be given you Riadditiop." ip NE Yesterday 'the profiteer excited execration, and sometimes envy; to- | day he excites only gity. and amuse- | | ment. The poor fool forgot utterly | the epigram of the East---"This, too, | shall pass away." He ignored, if he | jer know, the teaching of Jesus | about the transitoriness of material | riches. He thought his fat days of | public plunder were to continue in- | definitely--and, lo, already he has | been pinched, and is sque-ling as no | | war-sufferer ever complained. | One | of the pitiable spectacles of the day | of declining prices is the abject la-| mentations of the profiteers who | must now take a loss; it is in dark | | contrast with the attitude or quiet | | courage showin by the genaral public | | In enduring the profiteers' extor- | tions. Right before everybody's] | eyes, written large upon each day's | newspaper, is this glaring illustra- | tion of the truth 'of the teaching of | Jesus. | When the kingdom ers comes, it | brings a bettar sense of relative | values. All the martyrs and heroes and saints of the ages bore testi- mony to what was really worth while. They put first things first; and so lived and died for those re- Wards which abide. Jesus laid down { the permanent principle that heav- | enly treasure develops heavenly | hearts. They who live for great | ends become great in their own spire |1ts. To invest one's life in the per- | manent securities of heaven, Which | suffer no fluctuations, is to acquire | the mind of a citizen of the kingdom of Heaven. '"Heavenly-mindedness" | among men is evidently one of the | chief concerns of the wise Father, He wants His chilqren to be really rich, in riches that last. Golden Fetters Gall, A few days ago I walked down a busy city street, and it seemed as if every pair of men I met or passed were talking money. It was over- whelming. One revolts from the | sordidness of it all; pudiation of the best things of life. Money seems the master of our world. We behold it in little .incidents of everyday, and in the large concerns of world politics. Behind most of the wars that are raging to-day is the cold,' calculating, passionless avarice of great commercial inter- ests. High crimes of international affairs, sand low crimes of robbery, triud and murder, all owe thelr be- ing to desire for money. Small wonder that Jesus cried out that citizens of His Kingdom could not serve Mamman, or money. This bondage is incompatible with loyal- ty to God. No man ean be loyal to these, two masters. True, we may serve God And bave money for our servant; that is quite different. But when money ceases to be a servant steps in to sternly, 'This is trea- son to the King!" So here we have a simple test of iffe, straight from the lips of Jésus: 'Are we living for money, and what it may buy; or for Christ and what He wilh give? When we live for [money we put self first; indeer, | much modern "business ability," re- duced to its simplest terms, i$ mere- {ly a ruthless regard for self-advan- | tage. Acquisition _of 'money does | distort the true perspective of lite; - and dull the worth of the Christian |- --- Pity the Profitebra;-- wn feittéhship in the ki and from its re- Eraled rind of 1 lemon § Cups! one Royal Baking Polar ne Cream shortening and sugar together; add milk to beaten eggs and beat again; add ay to creamed shorten- ing and sugar; inutmeg |, and flavoring; add 3 cups flour sifted with baking pow- der; add enough more flour to make stiff dough. Roll out very thin on floured board; cut with cookie cutter, sprin- kle with sugar, or put a raisin or a piece of English walnut in the center of each. Bake about'12 minutes in hot oven, Cocoa Drop Cakes 4 tablespoons shortening 1 cup sugar cp mitk indie Royal Baking Powder cup cocoa teaspoon salt teaspoon vanilla extract virtues. 'Love of money," says the inspired word, 'is the root of all evil." But love of Christ is the root of all good: the best brothers of | mankind, the helpers of the'world, can say with "Paul, "The love of Christ constraineth mje." When the number. of these Christ-constrained men' and women increases sufficient- ly, wa shall have world of peace and good will and brotherhood. "What's the Use of Worrying 2" There is more powder than peace on the faces of the womeén one meets upon "eity streets. Lines of care | characterize the countenance of the modern business man. We are a worrying world. Any sort of remedy for werry, however superficial and inadequate, is sure to have popular- Far be it from us, in these trou- bled times, to advocate what Carlyle called "a diet of broad grins." There is warrant for the cynical definition Of a pessimist as "A man who has to live with a prefessional optimist." Nevertheless, worry and anxiety are needldss and futile. . More than that, Jesus brands them as marks of bad ngdom: If we define. worry 4s reasonable solicitude, then the answer is that it should be solicitude for things worth while. Most present-day wor- rylng is about our bodies, our clothes, our food, our outward appearance. Which Christ calls heathenish, It is unworthy of kingdom citizens. If folks would worry about their minds and their spirits, rather than about their possessions, the outlook would be brighter. In truth, our Lesson makes it clear that there is an equal obliga- tion not to grow anxious over the temporalities, and to be concerned for the things of the kingdom. Like all the philosophy of Jesus, this BAKING POWDER Absolutely Pure MADE IN CANADA ire such in spite of the Bible, Christ Pleased for aggressive, militant dis- ciples, who would actively seek first the kingdom of God and His righte- ousness. In other words, the King wants passionate partisans, to whom life 15 just an opportunity to serve the kingdom. Given an enthusiasm for the Cause of Christ, with devoted followers serving it by tongue and pen and per- sonality, there can be only one result: the inauguration of that era of bro- therhood among men which our world so sarely needs, and wheih, to be effective must have Jesus for its King and Redeemer. . New Cancer Cure Claimed In Berlin Berlin, Nov, 4, --The German press reports two cases of cancer cured by the injection of children's blood into the veins of the cancer patients. The cases were announced by Dr. Rollin, Hamburg. Both patients were near to death and the X-ray treatment haa tailed. The amount of blood fnjected Was two cubic centimetres twice weekly, Cancer never attacks child- ren, and it is one of the oldest theo- ries in'medicine thatshe fluids of the body have a healing power, Port Hope Fires. Port Hope, Nov. 4.--A large barn and ice house, the property of Mrs. Montizambert of Toronto, and situ- ated just off our main street, were destroyed by fire last evening. The garage belonging to Dr, McKinley was also badly damaged. A large barn and. stable about seven miles west of here, the property of William Payne of Newtonville, were complete- ly destroyed by fire last night. The buildings were used for the horses working on the provincial highway, and it is thought "that one of the teamsters dropped a lighted match. There is insurance of $600, % teaspoon salt Srated rind of Cream shortening; add sugas wly, ting well; add milk a little at a time; then add well-begten' egg! sift flour, baking 'powder 'and salt to- 'extract orange "gether 'dnd add to mixture; add flavoring and grat orange rind; mix well. ' in greased shallow or in- dividual cake tins, in hot oven 15 to 20 minutes. When cool cover with orange icing. COOK BOOK FREE finer "Bake with Royal and be Sure' wn - WEAR GERMAN UNIFORMS IN THE COAL MIN Men Say They're Ozechoe Slovaks Who Were Press= ed Into Service. -- 'Ottawa, Nov. 4.--Charges that there had been laxity on the part 8 Immigration department officials allowing foreign unskilled workers to enter Canada, which were voiced in the latest issue of The Veteran, are denied by officials of the department. The Veteran based its charges on "ugly rumors," and these statements were taken up editorially by TV Ottawa Journal. One of the statements made wa to the effect that at a Nova Scotia mine a number of recently imported miners appeared at the work "in the grey uniforms and field caps of Hun soldiers," thereby nearly precipitate ing a riot. ' Reports reaching the departmen from inspectors who were sent ou on the case wete to the effect I frertain men in the employ of the "| Dominion Coal Company had gone ta work wearing 'parts of German unis forms. These men, however, prove that they were nationals of Czech Slovakia, who had been pressed int service with the German and A trian armies. Théy had worn the uniforms to work in the pits" with the idea of ecofiomy in their minds, and with the thought of saving the: better clothing for other purpo The men in question, it is state 2 were expert miners and could not classed as unskilled foreign labor, ag alleged, ' ' C-------------- Italian artists have held a one-day strike as a protest egainst Lord Leverhulme's decapitation of his pore trait by Augustus St. John, and burii+ teaching is positive. Negative saints Ane Rl Me mm Less originate purpose, however, they are closely . & Nerve Pills, averted disasters. People to-day sre usi & Nerve Pills as thers which to ere are ditional food for the ~ tem, for without these Co. Limited, these connected with the pu around which there Milburn's steer a course for good health. very few to-day taking active part in any walk of life who do require, at some time or another, an ad- out their duties every other MILBURN'S HEART & NERVE PILLS Price 50c. a box st all doslers, or mailed direct on receipt of price by The T. Milburh Tercnto, Ontario, 5 re TC ening the Lif Toll ' I "HE value of the lighthouse is especially appreciated by sea- faring folks. Many fascinating stories of averted disasters structures the world over. Their first is preventing the loss of human life. In this rpose of Milburn's are also interesting facts of » g y must suffer. The effects of weakened Heart bod some, * u . & Nervesys. rly carry organ in hd e"" on~ Heart & Nerve centres vary. the heart thumps harshiy end ir. - Tey Jeet irritable and are sleeplessness at n duripg the 2 you owe to try 8 box of ed Leverhulme in effigy in Florence. "lf Heart With ers are inflicted ight, nl drowsy Sb to yourself asd

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