THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG. TH contain some truth, let us offer Hadji Omar, We certainly owe a of gra ot col is roas drinker--the Sold AGENCY FOR ALL | 'DCEAN STEAMSHIPS| » . For particulars apply to:-- J. P. HANLEY, C.P. & T.A, G.T. Ry. Kingston, Ont a rs in Si C UNARD ANCHOR HOR-DONAEDSO REGULAM STRVICHS MONTREAL-GL. ASGOW AS Fath Al ev, 19 FORTLAND--H From Portland Dec 10|Feb 16--Saturnia Dec 28|Mar 2--Cassandra (---------------------------- Dec. 10{Jan. 25 Mar N.Y, uAscow (via Moxitie) Oct. 2 « Nov. Nov. {Dec 0 i 13iDec. 2 Oct. 2 Nov. 3] Nov. - Oct. .....Berengaria Oet. . 1§iDec. 13... Aquitania | Nov. o Dec. 3{Dec. 31 .. Carmania N. Y. PLYMOUT: and HAMBOURG Oct. 2§|Dée¢. 81Jan. 9 ..........Saxonla N.Y. Vigo, Gibraltar, Patras, Dubrov- Naples, Trieste and Plump I Jtalia MEDITERRANEAN CRUISES FROM NEW YORK T0 Madeira, Gibraltar, Algiers, Monaco, Genoa, Naples, Patras, FPiracus, Trieste and Alexandria Oct. 221Dec. 7 .Caronta Nov: 19(Jan. .Cameronta Both steamers do not call at all ports THE ROBERT REFORDCO., Limited GENERAL AGENTS 3 KING STREET EAST TORONTO, ONT. FOR SALE Double stone dwelling, three storey, large lot; 1 extra lot. Good barn. Rents for $44 per month. Price $4,000. W. H. GODWIN & SON Real Ustate and Insurance 89 Broc!: Street. Phone 424, y Yo FOR SALE GOON, CLEAN COAL. A. Chadwick & Son New iocation: ' Corner Ontario and West Sta Phone 63. When you say & man acts aocord- grouna or fine ground for Tricolator and percolator wea, IS, story is discounted by cautious historians, but because it may to titude somewhere for the discovery fee. 1d in fn ding of Te te "the he ih. in M4, 1 end 2 Ib. tine. Whole, - A Blend £1 te Virginia Leal Shut Ey ous © ITION, SIMILA COLD £ A_ COUGH Sh ™ EVELOP IRE 8US~ ENED ly BEFORE eds es 538 AND to FOUND 14 Cen D2 THOMAS' ECLECTRIC Boys just love its smooth fragrant lather © LE ST (BABY: BEST fo, YOU After NNlness To gain new strength and to get well quickly you need a food with vitalizing, blood-mak- ing elements. Take Wincarnis. 18 oz. Bottles, $1.50 At All Dragyists Proprietors: COLEMAN & CO. Limited, Norwich, Eng. Canadian Office: 87 Portland St, Toronto. Frank 8. Ball. Resident Director. -- You cannot always tell: A 'girl with an inviting pair of lips may not welcome a kiss. The only way to find out is to try it. Knowledge is power: that is why the blackmatlers get away with their game. \ THE DIGNITY OF THE DOOMED "The International Sunday is "Paul's Journey to Jerusal School Lesson for Oct. 23rd em."--Acts 21:1-17, By William T. Ellis. Dying Russians are facing fate qu , with a prijaitive dignity | that awos wostorn-beboldess-- seen the same quality inthe starv ing | Chinese. In noble souls the presence of peril; or the sure approach of dis- aster, calls forth the finest qualities, Those of us who experienced the air raids of London and Paris learned deep lessons in how various types of persons behave in danger. Most of us know men or women smitten with incurable diseases and their strong serenity is & chastening spectacle. Franklin Lane's "I accept," as he faced the inevitable, ran like a tonic injection through the whole social ar- terial system of our western world. Beneath all the superficialties of our times lies this noble spirit of strong and simple resignation. Many millions are studying it, this week, specifically in the case of the Apostle Paul: but it was not living, and with others long dead. It was the hall-mark of that noblest Hero of eternity, the sensitive Lord Jesus, who went unblinkingly to a crogs which He did net deserve and could easily have escaped. Jesus and Paul are in the forefront of the fraternity of the fearless. They are captains of the goodly company of the dauntlesseounled. Crises only reveal character; they do not create it. Paul was in his great hour only the consummation of | what he had been through the years. Small-spirited, self-{ndulgent souls are the ones that scream and strug- gle, and shame thelr spiritual birth- right in hours of calamity. It is those who have lived greatly who die gloriously. A person's nature is not transformed in extreme experiences, Facing Jerusalem, with the sure tes-| timony that bonds and afflictions lay | that way, Paul could declare to the! weeping elders at Miletus, "I hold! not my life of any account as dear un- to myself, so that I may accompli sh | my course and the ministry which I received from the Lord Jesus; to testify to the grace of God." That is, pain or pleasure, life or death, were relatively unimportant: duty was all. ' st Our Misguided Friends. Counsels of caution and cowardice, rather than of courage, are common- ly to be expected from friends. When the comrades of the great apostle desired him to dodge his doom, they were running true to friendships form. Rare is the loved one who will | incite us to do the difficult, the dar-| ing, the desperate deéd. The devil who in the wilderness tempted the Master to take the easy way to dominion now does his work through friends: who usually give the same sort of advice, Paul's disciples and associates tried to deter hia from the dangerous course, little thinking what a moral collapse it would have been for that doughty old soldier, now grown gray on perils, to turn his back upon any hardship. Alas, that our best friends should be our worst tempters! Yet so it is. Why is the complaint so general to- day that the youll of our genera- tion is "soft" a pleasure-loving and lacking in high purpose? Sim- ply because parents, with misguided affection, want their sons to 'have a good time." Life is made toD eas for modern young people. The stérn rigors of discipline; the preemi- nence of principle, which ever puts duty above desire; the necessity for self-denial and laborious tasks-- these are not the fashion today. Parents are mo longer Spartan: we love well, but not wisely, There- fore youth spends more time at the dance "than at books. Our love for dis- | | tinctiye of him exclusively. He shared | | it with a multitude of persons, now \ their our own is not great.enough to hold \ them hardly to their highest and L asve most beroioscpossibilitiesc. We. Paris suade them net to go up fo any | {Jerusalem where we know suffering | awaits them. Those friends of Paul, like highest function; for a man's friend is the ome who helps him to be his best self. sm On To Jerusalem. In a gush of agony, the vénerable man who was the center of all this prophecy and pleading narrated in our Lesson Scripture cried, "What {do ye, weeping and breaking my Iheart? for I am ready not to be bound only, but also to die at Jeru- salem for the name of the Lord {Jesus." A peep into the Greek original of this story reveals the interesting fact that the phrase, "breaking my heart," means not "causing me {grief," but rather "impairing my 'purpose; breaking down my resolu- tion." Paul was not agonizing be- cause his friends were giving him grief, but because they were seeking 10 destroy his decision, interfering with his determination to do his duty. The Apostle cared more for his task than for his comfort. Surely, here was "a man of blood and irocm"--to use a phrase misap- plied to a militarist. His was red blood, rich in personal affection: what a human figure Paul is in this narrative! "This is not mere philoso- Phes sof propagandist, or theologian or ecclesiastic, but a friendly com- rade, war, and glowing in his per- |sonal relations with indivilluals, | whose heart dripped blood for those he loved. But he was a man of iron | too--with a will that even such an avalanche of misguided devotion {could not break. Jerusalem was his {destination and his duty: to Jeru- {salem he would go, and neither foes | nor friends could stop him. Thank God for the persons who are going somewhere! In a day of drifters we exult in men who have convictions and courage and who keep steadfastly on to great. goals, however much the fashions change. Such are the hope of our troubled time. The man who is really going somewhere always takes others along, or leads them after him. To the credit of the friends who tried to dissuade | Paul from going to Jerusalem, be it recorded that they went with him, in spite of the dan- gers ahead which they saw so clear- ly. Something of their leader's heroic spirit entered their own hearts." Always the best method of getting others to do the right thing, even when it is difficult, it to go straightforwardly on doing it our- selves, "We Who Are About To Die." When seen in the light of a méar eternity life takes on true propor- tions. Then it is that first things stand out as first. The man who ap- proaches death with a clear intelli- gence is able to appraise values. How all our lives would be trans- j{ormed could we but seé them from the brink of the grave! Many pres- | ent opinions would be reversed. Perhaps things for which we are sorgy would then take the place of other things of which we are proud. This man Paul, facing Jerusalem and death, was able to declare--and how much sublimer - this utterance than any afirmation of wealth or power or grandeur!--*] al pure from the blood of all men. For I shrank not from declaring unto you the whole counsel of God. I coveted no man's silver, or gold, or most | other friends, failed in triendship's | best | Stops Corns | in a Moment Do It by a Touch. Such Pains | Are Needless Now | 'OU can stop any corn pain instant. ly. You can remove, any corn in | short order. You can do it in'a way so gentle that you'll forget the corn. 'The-method. is: Blue-jay=--liquid-er plaster. A touch applies it. Then the whole corn soon loosens and comes out. Blue-jay is made in a 'world-famed boratory. . It' is moder, scientific, Before and After Vulcanizing your torn tires at Sud- daby's shops--a picture that tells the story of our efficiency and economy for thousands of tire users. "They bring the tires to us worthless; we return them back good as new. ----Suddaby Bros. Cor. Queen and Wellington Sts. Phono 1988 lal right. It is fast displacing former meth. ods, harsh and cruds. Tonight thousands of people willapply Biue jay wy not you? Watch it end or you. Try it tonight, Your druggist has Liquid or Plasteg Blue-jay stops pain-ends corns a Bauer & Black product Simple Way to Take Off Fat There can be nothing s'mpler than taking a convenient little tablet four) times each day until your weight is re- | duced to normal. That's all--just purch- ase 2 case of Marmola Prescription Ta- blets from your druggist for one dollar, the same price the world over. Follow directions--no starvation dieting or tiresome exercising. Eat substantial} foud--Dbe as lazy as you like and keep| on getting slimmer. And the best part of Marmola Tablets is they are harm-| less. That is your absolute safeguard | Purchase them from your druggist, or scnd direct to Marmola Co, 4612 Wood- ward Ave. Detroit, Mich. " that my were apparel. Ye yourselves know these hands ministered unto névessities, and to them that with me.' Happy is the man who, about to die, does not have to fill his closing hours with repinings. There is a rare dignity about the passing of a noble soul unashamed. The finest reward of life comes at the end. "Death tests all." If youth were wise, it would safeguard in the pres- ent what will in the future be its past. Then it can fage any fate un- affrighted. 1 YOUR HEALTH. Raymond 8. Copeland. M.D, Comissioner of Health New York City.) (By & Here is the Truth About Atrophy of the Optic Nerve, Nothing can be more cruel than to excite false hopes. A »€cent example of the harm of half-knowledge is tha widespread repetition of a story ab- out the cure of atrophy of the cptic nerve. When I first read it I felt sor- ry for the capable and learned phy- sician wko was quoted. I knew he would regret more than anyone else the unjustified bope stimulated in so many hearts by the misdirected reporter 4 The optic nerve is not unlike a telephone cable. It is made up of a great many strands or fibres. These come from the braln and yun to dif- ferent parts of the retina of the eye. In the optic nerve itself they are packed and held togetter like a great bunch of pencils in a package. Surrounding them is a covering or sheath of the nerve. The optic nerve comes from the in- terior of the skull, passes along the bony socket' in which the eyeball is contained and enters the eye. As soon as it penetrates the outer en- velope of the eye the outside sheath stops and the naked fibres spread out to reach qvery portion of the retina of. the eye. I am anxious to place cpus on the number--the multitude, indeed --of these individual nerve fibres. You must not picture the optic nerve as 'a solid thing, like a bar of iron or a piece of wire. It is a coil of hair, em blindness: disease upon the nerve fibres. any given fibre is so impinged upon as to cut off its nourishment nerve function, and if the pressure|' is continued until that particular fi- bre is bleached out and dead, rendered permanently useless. just as dead and useless as one of your fingers would be if you twisted a, wire about its base cutting off all circulation and nerve supply and Ft the band in place till the ti appreciate it? 5 Phone 1609 FORD SEDAN OR COUPE Drive a FORD SEDAN or COUPE this winter. It will give you a new con- ception of motoring comfort. You will not worry whether it rains, blows or snows--all kinds of weather are alike. And won't your wife and children We are equipped to give you prompt and skilled service at any hour. VanLuvenBros. 34-38 Princess Street. res of the optic nerve or the parts back of it in the brain, there will be total bindness. If only a part of the { optic nerve. is involved, be blindness in that part of the eye supplied by the affected fibres. there will Now, as to the permanency ot the It all depends on the effect of the Ir and it is It is putt, ered 104 80 pounds. No starving: no x husting NEE Se LE » died. Just what effect this process will have upon the useful vision of the victim depends on the number fibres involved. If part of them, half, or even more of them are in- volved, useful vision might still be preserved. If all the fibres of the op- tic nerve are involved in a similar manner, the eye is totally and per- manently blind. rf say The death of a fibre is called "'at- rophy"" of the fibre. When a lot of the fibres are involved, not enough to produce loss of vision, certainly not loss of sight in all parts of the field of vision, the condition is called "partial atrophy' When all the fib- res are thus affected it is "total at- rophy," hope of cure than' there is to grow a new finger if one is cut off. and for this there is no more Fortunately,- there are compara- tively few cases of total atrophy, and the causes are under such control when taken early that the terrible effécts can be averted. THR LATE EMMA STORMS. . = A GASTORIA For Infants and Children. Mothers Know That Genuine Castoria Thirty Years CASTORIA 1) LX TSR SRL SEG en A Bohevik ms on prove: in front of the Kremlin, Moscow. Note the strange hood worn by Soviet troops and the red flag attached to his fixed bayonet, silk. cut half-through a great rope [main intact. way tele other half would be undisturbed. It is like this in the eye, a many stranded roped or a skein of If you were to take a hatchet and the strands of the other half would re- If you were to file half- hrough a telephone cable, the one" service to the subscribers supplied by the wire strands of the If there is a disease severe enough or deep- seated enough to involve all the fib- The Funeral Took Place to the Wilt. on Cemetery. Oct. 19.--The death occurred at Kingston General Hospital on Oct. 12th, of Emma Storms, a resident of Wilton, who passed away following a short "iliness. The remains .were brought to the home of her brother, K. N. Storms. The funeral services were héld in the Methodist church on Tuesday morning at 10.30 o'clock, conducted by Rev. G Stafford, "Bulentiie, economics md msliowm pe s3vstics makes the cost of ordinary corn Sakes. the same ae by pame, Sydenham. The remains were placed in the Wilton cemetery. The late Miss Storms is survived by seven brothers, Korah and Sim, Wilt- on; William, Yarker; John, Syden- ham; Albert N,, Odessa; . Robert, Watertown, N.Y., Peter, California, one sister, Hattie, Watertown, N.Y, and Roy Storms, Toronto. The anniversary services held Methodist church on Sunday, Oct. 9th, were well attended. Rev. W. D. P. Wilson, Belleville, a former pastor, occupied the pulpit both morning and evening. Everyone was pleased to have the pleasure of lis- tening to Mr. Wilson's excellent dis- course. Mr, Winslow Lewis, Wash- ington, D.C, spent a week at the home of his nephew, Blake Switzer, and with other trieflds in Kingston and Collin's Bay. W. B. Storms left on Tuesday for Rutherford, N.J., to spend some time with his sister, Mrs. C. Booth. in Freemont Mills met with a serious loss when his driving horse "Dexter," was found in the pasture field with a broken | 'Blake Switzer has pur- chased a new car. Several of - the ladies of Wilton attended the W. M. 8. Convention held #4, Odessa on Oct. 12th. / If love were not blind sbme girls would not have any more change of getting a husband than the proveri- ial. snow ball would have of lasting in the lower regions. NOTICE: It's your fault if you get ordinary corn flakes. superior kind is sold under this name only-- The