Daily British Whig (1850), 13 Jan 1921, p. 9

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THURSDAY, JANUARY 13, 1921 [Cuticura Soap| ---- Imparts -- The Velvet Touch fom Dome Tucu Be rch ft emer CREAM FOR CATARRH OPENS UP NOSTRILS Quick Relief It's Splendid! Tells How. To Get from Head-Colds. It 4: Vue inure your cloxzed no will open, the air passages of head will clear and you can breathe | freely. No more hawking, snuffling, blowing, headache, dryness. No struggling for breath at night; your! cold or catarrh will be gone. Get a small bottle of Ely's Cream Balm from your druggist now. Ap- ply a little of this fragrant, antisep- tice, healing cream in your nostrils. It penetrates through every air pas- sage of the head, soothes the inflam- ed or swolien mucous membrane and relief comes instantly. It's just fine. Don't stay stuffed- up with a cold or nasty catarrh--Re- lief comes so quickly. NEVER LET COLDS RUN THEIR COURSE Hidden Dangers Lie Behind Simplest Form of Cold. Even No person who has any regard for their health can afford to neglect a cold. You positively can't afford to say: "It's only a cold, let it run its course." Any physician will telt you this is a grievous mistake, one for which many pay the price in the form of acute disease, some with fatal results. As soon as signs of a cold appear start taking Grip-Fix, the remedy which can be obtained at any drug store, and which will give relief in a single night. Its action on the sys- tem is almost immediate, the natural channels for carrying.off gystemic poisoes being kept open, the fever ish condition developed by colds kept down, and the accompanying muscu- lar pains. in the.back and other parts relieved. There is absolutely no secret about what is in Grip-Fix. The formula is printed on every box. Show it to your THE DAILY BRITISH W THE PREMIER OF ONTARIO AND MRS E. C.DRURY. Who visited Kingston on Wednesday--P remier Doctor of Laws at Queen's University. AS JESUS SAW THE MONEY QUESTION The International Sunday School Lesson for Jan. 16th is "Qur All for the Kingdom."--Matt. 19 : 16-30. By William T. Zllls. ¥itting like a key and its lock to family physician if you want to. Most doctors will heartily approve it. BPA is ro os. ot | | ~ OLDSTANDBY, FOR "ACHES AND PAIN Any Man or Woman Who K Sloan's Handy Will Tell You at SPECIALLY those frequently E attacked by rheumatic twinges. A counter-irritant, Sloan's Lini- renetrates without rubbing to the af- flicted part, soon relieving the ache and pain. for reducing and finally eliminating the pains and aches of lumbago, neu- ralgia, muscle strain, joint stiffness. exposure. You just know from its stimulat- ing, healthy odor that it will do you all druggists--35c., 70c., $1.40. Made in Canada. 10 9? Use Pyramid If Endurance is Being Tried to the Pile Suppositories ir u stru { with th ain Yt discomfort "Se itching, Same Thing. ment scatters the congestion and Kept handy and used everywhere sprains, bruises, and.the results ot good! Sloan's Liniment is sold by Liniment Limit Get a Bex of Pyramid Ing, pro es or hemor. rhoids, go over to any store and get a §0 cent box of ramid Pile Suppositories; Take no substi- tute, Relief should come so quickly you will wonder why anyone should continue to suffer the pain of such a distressing condition. For a free trial package, send name and - dress to Pyramid Drug Co, #08 ™ amid Bldg, Marshall, Mich. Our Sleighs i MADE IN KINGSTON our own existing world conditions is one of the tersely-told tragedies ot the New Testament. The tale is that of the rich young man who came to Jesus, questioning after the Supreme Good. RBvery reader of the familiar old story finds his heart warming to that noble youth. He has a fine spirit, and rare polish, and a real eagerness to live life at its best, It required no small degree of courage for that som of privilege to be seen in conference with the radical Rabbi from Nazareth, With his courage went open-mindedness also. He may fairly be said to represent the highest type of modern university man of in- herited fortune, Before we strike the stride of the story, let us stand apart for a para- graph to contemplate that young man. 80 wany homiletical stones have been cast at him for ages that We may lose sight of his real worth. For he wag a fine young man. His wealth and privileges had not shut the doors of hig inquiring mind. He wanted to be bigger than his for- tune. In real sincerity, he sought light upon his problem, which he per- ceived was a spiritual problem, from every possible source. That the un- conven..onal Nazarene, upon whom members of the young man's conser- vative class had begun to frown, had the word of light and leading, he had become assured. Therefore he sought his wisdom. Searched by the ques- tion of Jesus, the young man proved to be both moral and religious, a keeper of the Law. Small wonder the Master looked upon him with rearning and admiration. 80 He bade him do the one thing more that was needful--sell his goods for the benefit of the poor, and join the dis. cipleship. That final test the young man could not meet; for he was very rich. Upon that incident Jesus based some remarks about money which are peculiarly appropriate today. What Money Has Done To Us. Without passion or prejudice or denagoguery, let us try to get the Jesus-viewpoint upon the money question as it exists in our own world. As all who follow international affairs closely are well aware, it is the money-side of the readjustment of the world that has made most of the present trouble. Commercial am- bition and antagonism was one of the inciting causes of the war. Lurking in the background or all the decis- fons made at the peace conference were the financial phases of terri- torial changes: a big and disturbing book has been written upon the econ- omic aspects of the peace treaty. Ter- ritories were desirable or undesirable according to the money that the big powers saw in them. Mineral wealth bulked bigger than normal considera tions, in some instances. Repara- tions hang like a storm-cloud on the horizon toward which we look for peace. The manner in which govern- rients have lent themselves to com- mercial projects and practices is as- suredly a serious factor in creating discords between recent allies. In a word, money is a present interna- tional problem of greater magnitude than any mere question of deprecia- tion of exchange. Peace has been lamed by the blow of gold. All this is commonplace, We know that love of money has marred the honor of the nationg in the past two years. Even more familiar is the fashion in which greed of gold be- fouled the high idealism of the' peo- ples at war, .With shame we con- fess the sordid story of the munition- S0r3 aud other ar profiteers. That Scandal is one that will: for long years to come: for its oe ap- peared against the golden back- ground of the courage and chivalry and 'sacrifice of the greater company are just right ani i jlof men and women. Withal, we have to confess to be- Get them while they ast. McNAMEE & SLACK Phone 1217w, 54 QUEEN sT. Horae-shoeing and Repairing. Do not suffer with Itchi HE ar A ~ uired, ing part of a money-mad world. We have put the pursuit of gain, and indulgence in the luxuries it would buy, above the old integrities of char- acter. A first cause of the relaxed moral fibre of our time is undoubted- ly this vogue of money madness. Last week two eminent citizens of an Am- erican community were sent to jail for robbery and betrayal of trust; with no other reason than that the craze for money had usurped honor and decency and good sense. What is the much-discussed "crime wave' of the world today but a flouting of law and civilization for the sake of "easy money?" Truly, this old world in Which we dwell has. been sorely wounded by this terrible fashion of eagerness for money. When the Test Comes. In less crass and vulgar fashion we discern the workings of the same spirit which kept the rich young man of old from becoming a friend and a follower of Jesus--perhaps one of the great figures of th, Apos- tolic church. Even among "nice" people it is common to judge a per- son by his financial standing. So- called "Good Sociéty" has a dollar mark for a portal. The standard of success today is the money standard. One could not hope to be a "leading layman" except he were wealthy! Individual churches and national re- ligious organizations are fairly syco- phantic towards persons of wealth, The thing is too common to create comment, Saints and heroes, servants of the world and teachers of humanity, are looked upon rather pitingly by "'suc- cessful" men, if they have not made money. James T. Hill, who himself made more than money, once boldly affirmed that the one test of success was the ability to maxe and hold money. Whereupon a poet comment. ed: "0, Homer! Poet--genius-- What a woeful failure, fhou As thou beggedst in town and city Sustenance for life enow. What tho' through the endless ages Laurel wreaths are on thy brow, Still thou had'st no earthly riches And a woeful failure, thou. "0! Columbus! What a failure As thou sailedst uncharted seas! Tho' a world thou did'st discover, Still, a sovereign did'st not please; Bound in chains, by those thou honoredst By thy geniug and t, deed, Still in poverty thou perishedst Thou'rt a failure--sa we read. 'Jesus! Saviour! What a failure! + As Thou diedst upon the cross! Couldst Thou but have preached for profit, Then Thy life shoyld not know loss. What tho' worlds redeemed acclaim Thee, With the thorns upon Thy brow, Neither made nor saved Thou money, So a woeful failure Thou!" + Facing A Grim Fact. Jesus did not despise money as money, any more than He despised food or homes or education. What He did despise--ard that word should be read as 2onnoting also scorn and contempt and pity--was the exaltation of money into first Place in life. He saw that God's rival in men's hearts is money; there- fore He cried that we cannot serve God and Mammon. He asked for the rich young man's money in be- half of the poor, only because He wanted the young man's life, and saw .that his life, otherwise so fair, was in the grip of his fortune. The world has greeted with incredulity the announcement of the renuncia- tion of a legacy of a million dollars by a Massachusetts youth. The state of the public mind is such that it is difficult to entertain any other thought than that money is the prin- cipal thing. So long as money thus rules life, Jesus will be kept from the throne of sovereignity. That is the clear and welcome teaching of the Bible. Money as a servant must always have a place; money as master challenges the wvery kingshsip of God. Our young people must be taught-- chiefly by the practice of their eiders --that money is not the principal H < Drury received the honorary degree of thing. Unless we can produce a gen- | eration of Christians willing to be poor, we shall fail to make the first of all preparations for facing the tidal wave of revolution K that sweeping the world. It is slowly being forced into my consciousness that the lesson of the Russian aristocracy was all in vain | 80 far as the privileged peoples of the western world are concerned. I | say many instances of the utter in- | ability of the rich Russian¥ to grasp the idea that their money would not always purchase them special con- sideration, To them it was simply unthinkable that any revolution which dethroned the rights of place | and property could continue. Alas, ! that blindness has entailed the loss of many thousands of lives, and mis- ery bevond reckoning. Please God, we shall never see anything like the Russian revolution in this land. Nevertheless, there is under way an irresistable social movement which | will reformulate values, and curb the peculiar privileges and power of | mere money. That grim fact gives | present point to the teaching of the! Lesson. FoF Things Warth While. After His staggering words, about the rich man's entrance into the kingdom of heaven being as difficult | as the passage of a camel through a needle's eye, Jesus proceeded to set | forth to His amazed disciples the worth-whileness of service and sac- | rifice for the kingdom. Mere inyec- tives against wealth wil] get us no- | where. The way of the Master was to present the better part, the joy | {and privilege and reward of serving | | Hig- Kingdom. He offers the rich young man the career of all careers. Then, as now, | rich men were common; and, save | for his Inglorious contact with Jesus, this nameless young man passed on into the obscurity of the merely rich. Well has it, been said, "The rich man's sons do not have a fair chance in life." Doomed to be nonentities or worse, they go through the years as learners upon life, instead of lifters of life. Most of them do no high deeds, serve no great cause, leave no 1L.oble mark upon their generation. | What a chance the rich young.-man in the lessbn story wag given by the Master! | is | 1G. a Slory is i fais strength Mi auility to 4 perform feats on of noth to do things other men could not do has al- ways been his stepping store to power and position. vy" Every man wants to be a leader in his own line of work or sphere in life. Unless a man is a genius or superman he nerves steady. "Your Nerve"? could not hel me quite well. A can only attain his objec years with heart trouble. barn without resting, as me. Toronto, Ontario ive when he has strength--to have strength he must have health--to heye health he must be full blooded, his heart strong and his Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills have assisted many a man who was facing a cricial test and was not at the moment just feeling his best. How about ycurself? Are you facing some task requiring all your strength and Do as hundreds of others have done, have a box of Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills at hand and take them according to directions. They have helped other men past the trying or testing time and may enable you to carry on and win and keep the position you so much desire. Mr. Stephen Crouse, East Clifford, N.S., writes: --"T suffered for five I could hardly walk from the house to the I used to get so short of breath. Doctors My wife told me to get a box of Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills and I felt better after taking them; three boxes made I am new helping my son to work the truthfully say I feel like a different man." Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills are 50c. a box at all dealers, or mailed direct on receipt of price by The T. Milburn Company, Limited farm and can the cause of dry, thin and falling hair, Treatment: Gently rub Cuticura Oint- meat with the end of the finger, on spots of dandruff and itching. Follow next morning Soap. : better than these fragrant, super-cream emollients for all skin and scalp troubles, 5c. Ointment 25 and Sc. Taleam 2Sc. ma i i Sod 344 Se. Pasi St., W. ert Soap shaves without mug, Cuticura kills dandruff, stops itching, with a hot shampoo of Cuticura Repeat in two weeks. Nothing y ion. ian Depot: KENNEDY'S Cash Grocery CANNED GOODS SPECIAL Lombard Plums Green Gage, Plums Peaches and Pears ... (2 1b. tin) EXTRA SPECIAL! One tin Tomatoes, one tin Corn, one tin Peas--all + + 20c. tin «. .83c. 6 1bs. Rolled Oats ..... 3 lbs. of that good Black Goods delivered to all parts of the city. Montreal and Charles Street. Phone 669 And he missed it! But stay: what | I of ourselves and our sons? We are | alive in the most plastic and porten- | tous era in the world's history. Great | events are shaping on every hand. One man, with vision and courage, may do more than was possible to a hundred men a centugy ago. What | a day to be a servant the living God, a true brother of 'All men, and a builder of the kingdom of heaven on earth! He who puts Christ first today lives the life that lasts. G. Moon, Bath, who has been at- tending Queen's medical school for two and a half years, has been forc- ed to discontinue his studies this sea- fon on account of ill-health. ""DANDERINE" Girls! Save Your Hair! Make It Abundant! a - y i ~¥ 'Immediately after & "Danderine' massage, your hair takes on new life, lustre and wondrous beauty, ap- pearing twice as heavy aud plenti- ful, because each hair seems to fluff and thicken. Don't let your hair stay lifeless, eoloriess, plain or scraggly. You, too, want lots of long, strong, beautiful hair. A 35-cent bottle of, delightful "Danderine" {reshens your scalp, checks dandruff and falling hair. This stimulating "beauty-tonic'" gives to thin, dull, fading hair that youth- and abundant thick- ful brightness ness--All Owing to Very antibod Arvo Being Available Allen's Kingston Theatre Common Stock Has Now Advanced to . . . $65.00 per share ------------ = Heavy Demand aut RU TTT TT TTT TTT lA OS Il. ~~ High \ $ 1] E11 We have neither time nor room to devote to READY-MADE OVERCOATS and intend to get rid of our stock. These will be sold class goods which we guar- antee. Come in and see them. CRAWFORD & WALSH Brock Streets. [ETYDRETTTERER AGENCY FOR ALL STEAMSHIP LINES Special attention given your family or Iriends going to or returning from she Old Country. For information and rates apply te J. P. HANLEY, CP and T. A GT. Ry, Kingston, Ontario. Open day and night CUNARD ANC HO} ANCHOR. DONALD REGULAR SERVIOES Halifax te Plymouth, Cherbourg ® TSS Saxonia January #4 TO LIVERPOOL AND GLASGOW From Portland From Halifax Saturnia--Jan. 30 Cassandra--Feb, 18 . Cassandra---Mar. 30 . Saturnia~--Apr. 20 ... + Y., GLASGOW, (via Moville) Jan. 15|Feb. 19|Mar. 26 ......Columbia NEW YORK--LIVERPOOL Jan. 16|Feb. 15 SK Aug, Jan. 29 Jan. 29/Mar. 8/Apr. 16 , Mar. 12/Apr. 9(May 7 ... N.Y, CHERBOURG & SOUTHAMM™N o Jan. 20[Mar. 10 Feb. g/Feb. 26(Mar. 22 Apr. 7/May 12|June ¢ N.Y, PLY. CHER. & LONDON Feb. 1|Mar. 15|Apr. 19 Albanis NEW YORK, PLYMOUTH, CHER. BOURG, HAMBURG Jan. 22]Mar. 1|Apr. 12 NEW YORK Jan. 18 ,.. tens N. Y. to Vige pain), Patras, Dubreve nik and Trieste varie amar i nbn crsseman. Italie " tes of t and " Whar particulars appt to 106A! agents od THE ROBERT REFORD CO, LTD. General Agents WOOD Sawed in Stove Lengths BOOTH & CO. Foot West Street td at cost price. KINGSTON WELDING SHOP Has Been Taken Over By 4 G. A. WRIGHT'S MACHINE WORKS We specialize in Weld broken ris oF Automobiles, Cracked Water acket, etc. All work guaranteed. 40 Princess St. « - Phone 1264. -- a ---- S---------- AEE EAA ELEC EAA AR ORO . «tl : Firewood Large quantity of sound Railway Tigs tor sale cheap. All teats reduced to clear. We need the room. L Cohen & Co. "s--

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