t O BAD BOILS S ; HAD TO GIVE UP WORK From the days of Job, up to the ent time, boils have been one of afflictions of the human race. 4 All the poulticing and dancing you Ay do will not prevent them from king out again. \ * Bolls are simply caused'by the bad bursting out; and the bad must be made pure before the Is will disappear. Burdock Blood Bitters, which has on the market for over forty rs, 18 well known as the greatest 00d medicine procurable. + It purifies the blood by removing pi particle of foul matter from the , and when this 1s done the \ vanish, and you should never be troubled again." |, Mr. James Fahey, Newport Island, e., writes: --"I was troubled with ils on my back and neck, so bad Bat I was obliged to give up work. tried several remedies, but got no lef. Finally I went to a doctor, he treated me for several weeks, all without benefit. At last a end told me of Burdock Blood Bit- , 80 I decided to give it a trial. 1 three bottles, but before I had en two the boils were all gone. It . 18 eight months now, and I have had BO return of the old trouble, and have r felt so well." "_B.B.B. is put up only by The T. 'M#lburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. RAILWAY HTT AGENCY FOR ALL STEAMSHIP LINES attention given your family going to or returning from Country. elal riends Oud For information and rates apply to J. P. HANLEY, CP, and 1. A G1. Ry, Kin Ontario. Ope SIGE #) ANCHOR \WCHOR-DONALDSON REGULAR SERVICES ston, n day and aigit Halifax to Plymouth, Cherbourg and Hamburg TSS Saxonia Jan, 25|Mar. 17 TO LIVERPOOL AND GLASGOW From Portland From Halifax turnia--Jan. 30 ........ "eb. 3 Aassandra--Feb. 1§ Cassandra--Mar. 30 .. Baturnia--Apr. 20 .... & N.Y, GLASGOW, (via Morville) feb. 19|Mar. 26|Apr. 23 ...... Columbia L . .Vedtris n. 29/Mar. S$|Apr. 16 , .Carmania r. 18[Apr. 23|May 21 Caronia r. 22|Apr. 30|June 4 ....K. Aug. Vict, YX. OHERBOURG & BOUTHAMI N n. 20{Mar. 10 Imperator 3 'eb. 26(Mar. 22 .Aquitania Apr. 7/May 12(June ¢ Mauretania N.Y, PLY. CHER. & LONDON b. i|Mar. 15/Apr. 19 +Albanfa ; NEW YORK, PLYMOUTH, CHER. OURG, HAMBURG Sen. 22|Mar. §|Apr. 13 ....... .Saxonia Y. te Vigo (Spain), Patras, Dabrov. nik and Trieste . Italia For rates of passage, freight fi * particulars apply to local aon are * THE ROBERT REFORDCO.,Limitep GENERAL AGENTS # KING STREET EAST TORONTO, ONT. Mattresses Don't throw away your old Mattresses. We renovate all kinds and make them as good as new. Get our prices. Frontenac Mattress Co. 17 BALACLAVA STREET Phone 2106w. FOR SALE GOOD, CLEAN COAL. A. Chadwick & Son 'New location: . Corner Ontario and West Sta Phone 67. AS A MAN WENT-F THE DAIL ly and tenderly showed to His friends | ORTH TO DIE | | | As a young reporter, I once had occasion to view the body of an un- known wayfarer, who had died In the almshouse of a small town. The doddering old pauper who had been with him at the end mumbled tooth- lessly to me about how the dying man had pleaded, in vain, for some one to hold his hand as he passed into the unknown. That picture has all these years stayed by me: a lone- ly, nameless man, dying among strangers, and crying in vain for even the friendly touch of an allen hand. Companionship, sympathy, friend- ship---every one yearns for these in the dark and difficult hours. Even Jesus was not beyond this hunger. We find Him kin to our humanity as He opens His heart to His company of friends and tells them that He is about to die. A solitary way walk- ed the Saviour: thht He might be true companion to all others who walk alone. There are those who minimise the death of Jesus. Not so He Himself. In His deepest hours of self-revela- "tion with His friends, it was of His death He spoke. In the experience of the transfiguration, the theme of His conversation with Moses and Elijah was His death. In the agony of the Garden it was the approach- Ing event of His death that filled His thought, Much as the life and words of the Master mean to mankind, it is His death that crowns and ex- plains all. The Cross interprets both time and eternity. "Under an Eastern sky, Amid a rabble's cry, A Man went forth to die For me. "Thorn-crowned His blessed head, Blood-stained His every tread, Cross-laden, on He sped For me. "Pierced glow His hands and feet, Three hours o'er Him heat Fierce rays of noontide heat, For me. | "Thus wert Thou made all mine; Lord make me wholly Thine; Grant grace and strength Divine , To me." The Leader of All Heroes. In the background of our day's real thinking lies the memory of our soldiers who in the war proved the underlying courage of our race: We | do not talk much nowadays--not | enough, surely--of these heroes who sc villantly went "over 'the top," When our fevered world comes to itself we shall more clearly under- stand the place and the glory of that unsurpassed revelation of hero- ism. Then we shall rightly appraise the character of the boys who wait- BR A ct ee tt an DANDERINE Stops Hair Coming Out Thickens, Beautifies. & A few cents buys '"Danderine." Af. ter a few applications you can not find a fallen hair or any dandruff, be- sides every hair shows new life, vigor, brightness, more color and abundance. . NOSE CLOGGED FROM . A COLD OR CATARRH (2 1b. tin) EXTRA SPECIAL! One tin . Tomatoes, one tin obe tin. Pes-Zall 6 Ibs. Rolled Oats'... . 85, 8 Ibs. of that good Black Tea .ivon.nivean., $1.00 Goods delivéred to all parts of 4 the city. Montreal and Charles Street. ' Phone 660 thin girl may be graceful.. But TR fed girl who wobbles when she ialks attracts all the attention, Cream in Nostrils To Up Air Passages. Ah! What relief! Your clogged nostrils open right up, the air pas- sages of your head are clear and you can breathe freely. No more hawk- ing, snuffling, mucous disctarge, headache, dryness--no struggling for breath at night, your cold or catarrh is gone. Pont stay stuffed up! Get a small bottle of Ely's Cream Balm from your druggist now. Apply a little of this i Sg antisepti¢ cream in your nos- , let it penetrate through every air passage of the head; soothe and heal the swollep, inflamed mucous membrane, giving you instant relief. Ely's Cream Balm is just what every cold and catarrh sufferer has been seeking. It's just splendid. By William T. Ellis. ed in the mud and cold for the zero hours; and who open-eyed entered into the jaws of death. This mem- ory is one of the most precious as- d.wn as a standard to all succeeding gengrations, Properly and we appropriately, experience of Jesus, who, all-seeing and unfearing, went steadfastly up to Jerusalem; where awaited Him a horrible fate of which He was fully aware. He knew it all. Not a par- hidden from His eyes. As our Les- 80.. text says: "And as Jesus was 'Boing up to Jerusalem, He took the twelve disciples apart, and on the way He sald unto them, 'Behold, we £0 up to Jerusalem; and the Son of -priests and scribes; and they shall condemn Him to death, deliver, Him unto" the Gentiles to mock, and to scourge, and to crucify; and the third day He shall be raised up.' What a Hero was our Lord? And what a leader for stout-hearted youths today, Enter The Ambitious Woman. Like a dash of cold water on the pale face of Jesus, came an interrup- tion from the mother of James and | John, his favorite disciples. The {Lord had opened His heart to His friends. He had given them a glimpse of His deepest experience. In most sacred confidence, He had shared His innermost feelings with them. Instead of receiving in turn understanding and sympathy and the fellowship of friendship, He gets an ambitious re- quest for political preferment! While | He had been talking of the'sublimi- Jesus had been rebuffed cruelly in His outstretching for sympathy. Zebeded's wife was an ambitious woman, an early representative of the familiar and universal type of woman who seeks to further the for- tunes of her men. She was proud that her sons were in the inner eir- cld of the great Teacher's friends. {She believed in Jesus, after the | vague, misunderstanding faith of most of His followers; and she ex- | pected Him, as the Messiah, to get up a temporal kingdom. In that | kingdom she wanted her sons to have the highest places. We may not be too hard upon the | mother of John and James. Women {and men of her state of mind have | persisted throughout the Christian centuries, withstanding all the clear revelations of the mind of Christ and | the monitions of the Spirit. Ambi- tion in the church is one of th» nulli- fying forces that christianity has still to endure. A Modern Version. I know one layman, once a dele- gate to the highest court of a great American denomination, who in im- puisive, honest indignation, once spoke out against a shamefully politi- cal organization, that was election- eering for the highest office in the church's gift. His simple, direct and hot words of condemnation wrecked the plans of the "machine" for that occasion--but he himself was sub- jected to such obloquy and scanda- lous misrepresentation that he has never since been near an ecclesiasti- cal gathering, For, says he, "If the highest offi- clals and 'leaders' of the denomina- tion are so committed to these base practices of political chicanery and trading and 'deals' that 'they resent, as 'super-politics," the most elemen- tal statement of the historic chris- tian teachings concerning the gov- ernance of the church by the Divine Spirit, then I see nothing for me to do but to bear witness against such Practices and ideals by abstention from all participation in denomina- tional affairs. There is too much constructive work to be done for the kingdom for a man to fritter away his energles by trying to circumvent those servants of the evil one, the ecclesiastical politicians. I shall bear witness against them, even as Jesus did against the same breed in His | day, but I shall not turn aside from the service to which I have been called in order to combat or over- turn them." This theme, of the place of world- ly ambition and despicable politics in the life of the church today, Is too large a one tc be gone into here: though it is logically involved in any treatment of the scheme of Zebe. dee's wife and her sons to secure peculiar advantages for themselves In Christ's kingdom. Much of the Woe of the Near East is due to the political rivalry of branches of the Christian Church. If the ecclesias- ticat politicians would permit, the peoples of the Balkans and of the Ottoman Empire would dwell to- gother in neighborliness. The first +echism in the apostalate grew out of selfish ambition: and woe is us that the schism has not been healed unto this day. " The New Road To Power, Although all the centuries have needed the radical teachings of Jesus which followed this incident, ft al. most seems as if it were especially designed for our own perplexed and difficult day. Be it observed that Jesus, unlike the laymen I have Just quoted, did not filing Himsel? out in i distain from such unworthy com. pany. © Instead, turning aside from His own agony of ticle of the shame and suffering was | man shall be delivered unto the chief | and shall | comprehending | | ties, they had been thinking of the | | positions they might attain) Like the | 3¢TVe to the utmost, for the sake of dying wayfarer, who had pleaded in | vain for some one to hold his hand, | deemer, then we shall have an order {of life that will be little less than | | The International Sunday School Lessoh for Jan. 23rd | is "Promotion In the Kingdom."--Matt, 20 : 17-28. Y BRITISH WH the better way. Here we have the new ldw of the Kingdom: the distinctive character- istic of the reign of Christ: the man- ner of life that makes needless all t | Polshevism "Bul Jesus called them unto Him, {and said, "Ye know that the rulers sets of our civilization, to be handed | speak of it in connection with the | | | | | of the Gentiles lord it over them, and their great ones exercise authority over them. Not so shall it be among you: but whosoever would become great among you shall be your min- | ister; and whosoever would be first | among you shall be your servant: even as the Son of man came not to be ministered unto, but to minister, and to give His life a ransom for many.' Is this mere impractical presenta- tion of the heavenlies? Look about and see. In realms small and great, we kfiow that honor and power ulti- mately go to those: who most truly serve. What gives to America and Canada their unique position in the world today? What made them so powerful at the recent League of Na- tions meeting in Geneva? Is it not their loyalty. to these basic ideals of service? Their world-wide philan- thropy at the present time, in China, in the Near East and in Central Europe, have given them an imperial hold upon the confidence of peoples. By the road of ministry they have all unexpectédly - come to thrones of power. In so far as they have follow- ed the Jesus way, they have come to true greatness. _ Better Than Bolshevism. That programme is practicable. Wherever it has been tried it has produced the highest state of human | society. In.all carefulness and so- berness it is to be solemnly declared today that the one preventive of the calamities of radicalism; the one remedy for the cruel inequities of capitalism and privilege; the one adequaté cure for our present saturn- alia of materialism, is the acceptance of the Jesus principle and program- me of service, When the most help- ful men are deemed the greatest, and when the ambition of all is to society and in the Spirft of the Re= the kingdom of heaven on earth. As we lead men and women, boys and girls, to the Saviour, we lead sion. "Service' has come to be a watch- word in business today; for the cold commercial réason that it is "good business." There is more of uncon- sclous absortion of the spirit of Jesus in the world than we can commonly perceive. Even the support that the doctrines of radicalism get in this western world is really only an out- flowing of the ingrained christian spirit of brotherliness and of minis- try. If our christianity were vitally and militantly functioning, it rath- er than the perversions of Bolshe- vism, would be challenging the world's attention. When we pro- mote the kingdom of God by selfless service we are fulfilling the highest lived,--and died. Parham Personals. Parham, Jan. 17.--Quite a number of people attended the Tierney fam- ily show in the hall. Mr. Black is in Toronto. Mrs. W, D, Bertrim jis at Verona with her daughter, Miss Genge. Mrs. Morey at Frank Wagar's, J. A. Goodfellow in Montreal; Ed. Barr and family in the city; Mr. and Mrs. George Bertrim, Long Lake, at Wm. Louck's. Mrs. Cronk at Wagar- ville; Don. Wagar and family at G. 'A. Smith's; J. Lowery at J. Camp- sall's; Mr. Bradshaw and family at C. York's; Mr. and Mrs. F. Wagar, Guy Wagar and Harold Smith at T. E. Wagar's; W. Revel, Verona, at J. iA. Goodfellow's; Mr. and Mry. Minor- gan, Claude, Percy and George Rey- nolds at Verona. ---------------- Sceley"s Bay Notes. Seeley's Bay, Jan. 18. -- The farmers in this locality are busy cut- ting add hauling wood. A good many of the village people are also getting up wood owing to the high price of coa). C. Hartley made a busi- ness trip to Kingston on Friday. J. N. Chapman has engaged 'Joseph McIlroy to paint and paper his new residence in Kingston. Miss Elva Polk, Kingston, was a week-end visi- tor in the village. Born, on Sun- day, Jan. 16th, in Kingston General Hospital, to Capt, and Mrs. Harry Randall, a son. Hood's Sarsaparilla Makes Food 'Taste Cood Dubiies the owt, end thes reeves screfuls, citarrh, the pains' and oches of rheumatism and gives strength to the whole system. Nearly §0 years' pisnomena! sales tell the story of the great merit and Succses of Hood's Sarsaparilla. Rt is just the medicine you nesd now, Hood's Pills help--fine cathartie, Just One Application and the Hairs Vanish (Modes of To-day) harmless, yet very effective, treat- ment is here given for the quick re- moval of hairy growths: Mix enough powdered delatone and water to cover the undesirable hairs, apply paste and after 2 of 3 minutes re- move, wash the skin and the hairs have vanished. One application us- | ually is sufficient, but to be certain of results, buy the delatone im an aig, He patient- | oq. { v -- ? 1~ short-sighted destructiveness of | Short of this goal we may not stop. | { The Trouble on the Line Cannot Be (1 them to this conception of life's mis- | law of life; the law by which Jesus | § 1G. LITERARY SOCIETY | {Has Been Formed in Connection With High School. : Sydenham, Jan. 17.--Canon Jonce, | Kingston, addressed the members of St. Paul's D. 8. L. Scciety oa Friday {evening, takinz as his subject: "A {Trip to England And What I Saw There." The lecture was filustrated with lantern views. Patrick Groomes | { has sold his house, on Bridge street, at present occupied by'S. W. Alexan- der, to Samuel Babcock. The High {Sehool Literary Society was organiz- i ed for the winter term last week. Cf- ficers elected wer2: President, Frau- | | cis Shillington; secretary, Miss Hatt e | {| McKeever; treasurer, 11win Stafford: { pianist, Charles Sedgewick; poet, | Miss C. Morrow; historican, James | Garvin, The first meeting comes on | Friday, Jan. 28th. The body of the child of Bert-Wart- man was brought here from New- (burg, on Tuesday last, and was plac- |ed in the vault. Two 'hockey games were played here last week, the first { 9 THURSDAY, JANUARY 20, 1921. GIE Pastilles A Few Words About the Earnings of One of Our Canadian Rubber Companies This company started making Rubber Bottles, etc, Dividend first year 1918 100 per Cent. stock. 1919 50 per cent tires and tubes also: Dividend second year / First half of 1920 13% per cent. now making in cash. in cash THE LION TIRE & RUBBER CO. LTD. All common shares $10 par, with 30% bonus, der more favorable conditions than are starting un- any former company, as we have the experiences of other companies to guide us and have secured the services of two of the leading rubber ex {one being on Thursday, between Ver- |cna and Sydehham, The game was |an interesting one to watch, and was { fairly fast in places. The final score | was eight to five, in favor of the lo- [cals. On Saturday afternoon the sec- | ond game was played, Cataraqui team testing their strength with the | locals. This game wap not quite so | fast as the other, as it was inclined ervise our produce. The Prudential Bond & Securi KINGSTON 182 ONTARIO ST. to be one-sided, although the score {does not indicate it. The score was | {live to three for the home team, | | Cataraqui gaining most of their | { 80als in the final period. Arthur Lee | and Van Young proved the scoring | aces in both games. W. H. Arthur has {sold his house just west of the cheese | factory to George Swerbrick. Bruce Joyner, a former resident of {the village, is spending a few days with former friends. Mrs. Dowdell, wife of a former Anglican rector here, is visiting at the home of Mr. | and Mrs. F. Sine. . Mrs. Babcock, Bejleville, 1s spend- ing some time with friends and rela-. | ives in this vicinity. The special services which have | Leen held in Grace Methodist church | during the past two weeks, conelud- ¢d on Sunday, when foar services | vere .conducted, including a men's | | r1éeting at three o'clock in the after- | noon. J. J. Lindsay, Toronto, has { been the evangelist during the series. | NORTHBROOK 'FHONELESS, Located. Northbrook, Jan. 14.--Ideal wea- |ther and roads are favoring the farmers in hauling many logs to the | | various mills, and also to load the | | lumber at the station. | A. E. Fletcher, manager of the | Ore Chimney mines, has retufned to | {Oversee winter preparations for the | |large electric power house under | | construction. C. C. Thompson and | H. Scruton spent a few days in the | Denbigh district this week. Mr. and | Mrs, W. Cassada were week-end guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ashton, Tweed. | All seem greatly in favor of hav- ing J. L. Lloyd appointed polica | magistrate, as successor to J. M. {Dafoe, as he is more centrally lo- | cated. A few from here are attending the Movement revivals being held at | Harlowe by Rev. Mr. Carson. Herb- ert Watson, Winchester, is aiding | Samuel Both in the Ore Chimney | { mines office. Messrs. Edward and | Denis Bosley made a hurried trip to | Bogart during the week. A number of men and teams have | gone north to Cox's camp for the { Winter, but he needs many more yet. { Mrs. John Smith has returned, after | | visiting with her daughter in Belle- | ville. Plans for the much-needed new school to be built in Northbrook are being made. At present over twen- ty scholars are compelled to walk | {from two to three miles to outside | schools. | The Kaladar northern telephone {lie has been useless for some Lime, and the cause cannot be located. It is a great drawback in its present condition. Sharbot Lake Tidings. Sharbot Lake, Jan. 16.--Mr. and Mrs. Lochead have returned after | spending two weeks with the form- jer's parents, at Larchwood, Ont. Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Buell entertained the choir of the United Church on Wed- nesday evening. Rev. P. C. Watson, Anglican clergyman, will leave for his new field at Shannonville next week. His many friends regret his de- parture. Miss 8. Park, Watson's Cor- ners, is visiting her sister, Mrs. H. Lochead. Mfss Grace Kimberly, { nurse-in-trfining at Rockwood Hospi- | tal, spent Me holidays at her ome here. ! Two .sleighloads of young people drove out to Thomas Duffey's, Mab- erly, on Monday evening, and had a mest enjoyablé evening. A new doc- perts of the continent to sup- ty Company (Hotel Frontenac) Domed Cheap--Efficient Deliveries for the farmer and the business man means increased business and greater profits. The FORD is the cheapest truck, as your first investment and the cheapest to maintain. _ Call in and let us give you some figures We have bodies to on your problems of hauling. suit any need. il VanLuvenBros. Sales and Service Phone 1609. 34-38 Princess Street. slowly towards ment sustained in contai for the Jarvis Bul TORONT tor is expected on Jan. 17th, to fil the vacancy which occurred several months ago, when Dr. F. Stonness left for Ottawa. Skating is the order of the day. The young people are busy practicing for a concert in Feb- ruary. x . Leonard Blakely has returned to his work at Nairn Centre after spend- ing the holidays at his home here. Mr. and Mrs. Pincombe have return- ed after spending a few days with friends in London. Mr. Donoghue, Burretts' Rapids, spent a few days with his sofi-in-law, Rev. P. C. Wat- soff. Mr. Robertson, Marmera, has been engaged as teacher. Mr. Strat- tan, of the creamery, spent the holi- days in Belleville. J. Armstrong has gone to work in a lumber camp at Watson's Corners. John Scott's house is nearing completion. We regret that Mre. A. Reyndids has been ill for the past week. James Irwin at- tended the funeral of his brother at ttawa. It makes a thirsty man mad every time he thinks of all the good alcoho! that is being spoiled by the patent The Tide Has Turned When commodity prices decline, when the wheels of commerce and trade slow down, and labor, that mighty force in in , competes for em RR ahd the history of finance, the for money gradually lessens, money rates gradually decline, and bond prices move It requires no seasoned financier to recognize these conditions as existing to-day. High grade bonds cannot remain at their present low levels. (The fore-sighted investor who takes advantage of present conditions, and places every available dollar in Canadian Bonds, will see his judg- Our latest issue of the "Investmant Guide," a monthly much 4nformation of Value to investors, wi ing. Send for it to-day. Before You Invest, Consult Us ESTABLISHED : + CORRESPONDENTS LONDON.ENG. NEW YORK MONTREAL WINNIPEO ment, higher levels. the next few months. ication, be mailed BE a s A FIRE AT ODESSA The U. F. 0. Held Its Annual Meet- ing Last Week. Odessa, Jan. 15.--Vigitors: Mr. and Mrs. Freeman, Sydenbam, were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Snider last Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Clark, Kingston, spent MomMay at, Thomas Kenny's. Mrs. John Mahar and children, Marysville, spent last week with Mrs. B. J. Oswald. Mrs. Atkins, Kingston, is the guest of her brother, G. H. Remion. Ernest Par. rott has been appointed assessor for 1921. Henry Bryant left last week to spend the winter with his sister near London, Ont. The apnual meeting of the U. F, O. was held last Monddy night in the town hall. The shme directors were appointed for the coming year. The members of the club were well re- presented, and the different addres ses were enjoyed by all present. original package. Mix fresh as want- medicine manufacturers, Quite a number of the young people attended the social dance at Glen- vale last Friday night. Peter Snider has purchased the lot on Main street from Mac McDonali and Intends building a residence in the near future. The home of Mrs. Harry Freemantle was nearly des- troyed by fire last Saturday, about twelve o'clock. The origin of the fire Is supposed to be, from the pipes burning. There wag insurance to partly cover the loss, The many friends of Charles Hamm were pleased to hear that he has passed Lis third year Christmas ex- aminations, at Osgoode Hall, Toron- to. . Do nat suller Sieh Tog Hives Tog on pints: ing Fries No surgical be ? Cnn wt rob ot A 00. i