Daily British Whig (1850), 13 Mar 1924, p. 3

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i x THURSDAY, MARCH 18, Shake Your Winter || { Cold -- All Yield to §| { We are placing Dr. Hickey's on Treatment The Speedy Relief SALE. For All Coughs The chest rub for all heavy chest colds and congestion, a small number ; THE SPEEDY COLD of regular $15.00 CAretyzs white, gold-filled for head colds and all forms of , "11 RIBBON L. T. Best WATCHES = 51000 These Watches have 15 Jjewelled movements and. are cased in both Octagon | $1,900, Brick, Semi- and Cushion shapes. | Detached At $10.00 these @ rooms, B. and Tollet, Electric Watches are re- Light and Gas. North end. markable value. $5,200, Brick, Detached. 6 rooms and attic, B. and Toilet, Electric Light and Gas, Hot Air, large Garden, Fruit' 'and Flowers. .Central. Right of way. - Sall at office. © Bateman's Real Estate 11134 Brock Street, Kingston Telephone 1925F. Guaranteed, of course. PAINTING and DECORATING At this time of the year many peo- ple do their cleaning and repairing. Our new samples of Wall Papers are here. Make your selection early and do not be disappointed. Buy B. & H. PAINT in Blue Tins. Every can has Brandram-Henderson's guarantee. 3g ELECTRIC LAMPS 25, 40 and 60 Watt ...... 25c. each. McKelvey & Birch, Limited General Contractors, Heating Specialists, Steam Fitters and Plumbers, Jobbers of Plumbers' and Gas-Fitters' Supplies, Stoves, Shelf, Heavy and House Furnishing Hardware, Tools, Ofis, Ber: Supplies, Sheet Metal and Tia Werk; Electric work; Painting and Paper Hanging. Special work of sll kinds undertaken. § OUR NEW HOUSE FURNISHING DEPARTMENT We have just opened up our new Drapery Department and have a complete, new stock of Chintzes, Madrases, Cretonnes, and Artificial Silks in the latest shades and designs for Spring. A very large assortment of Rugs, in all sizes. NEW DINING ROOM AND BEDROOM FURNITURE T.F. Harrison Co. Ltd PHONE 90. THE [I LETTERS To The Editor (and without any chance of being de- ang with the inferior quality of r= ] { any other country, so the consumers The Sabbath Question. Verona, Mahkh 11.--(To the Edi | { tor): May I add & few words on this | | interesting subject\so ably discussed | in your columns by)your Bible read- ing correspondents/ Without. at alt | rs any supgrior ability, yet I { would like most fespectfully to call | | attention to one point that has not | yet been mentioned. As might be ex pected my views are far more in ac cord with the views expressed by Mr. | Haggarty in the Whig to hand 'his evening, than by either Dr. Lake or Mr. Lindsay. But even Mr. Haggarty fails to point out this one very im- portant fact to which I now call at- tention. Great stress is lent by the Satur- day advocates on the word "Sev. enth," and they can see nothing else | for it but that Saturday is the sev- enth day Sabbath, They get that idea from Gen, II, 2, 3 where we are told that "God ended His work and rest- ed on the seventh day," Now, first: Great Hebrew scholars tell us that in many M. S. S. such | as the Siptuagint, Syrian and Samaritan it reads the sixth Instead of the seventh which of course Is correct if the work of creation last- ed just six days. Again: If God "rested" on the sev- enth day we of course do not under. stand that to denote weariness, but cessation, like a rest in music. He ceased whea the work was accomp lished. Now I come to the main point-- this ceasing or resting on°the sev- enth day. Let me here ask the ques- tion, Whose Seventh? It certainly was not Adam's as he had only just been created, and no one can have a seventh day of existence withou. having.previously lived six days. The | enquire in the near future, resulting { 61 Hunter street west. DAILY BRITISn WHIG | markets. Well, if it -made shi pping | through the United States prohibi- tive, wouldn't it be the best thieg | | that could happen? | Our wheat should go to foreign | markets in our own bottoms, pure, i will be sure of getting the most wholesome and nourishing bread food produced, for which they «a i] { quite willing to pay a reasonable 0 premium, if définitely sure of getting value in extra healthfulness and nourishment, | Ten thousand United States farm- | ers have already enquired for Cana- dian wheat land this season, and no doubt a hundred thousand 'more wiil in say fifty thousand experienced United States farmers, cutting from their necks the millstone of $100 to $200 an acre land, expensive opera- tion, declining acreage production, and constantly reduced food quality, and trek to oyr Canadian North West, for land at from $5 to $25 per acre, easier and cheaper worked, with 20 per cent. more quantity pro- duction, and 50 per cent. better qual- | Teen || | Announcing the --W. O. SEALEY. ® ® spon, Mirch 13% continuation Kingston, March 12.--(To the , Editor): In last night's Whig Mr. | Lindsay makes another vigorous and at the same time fruitless attack on Dr. Lake's statements regarding the | 'eo Sabbath. Mr. Lindsay's argument | : was all right two thousand years | Friday and Saturday ago, but today we are living under | the grace. Mr. Albertson puts me in mind of the little dog running along the roadside looking for his master, for he, too, is in the same | Ot F : l Sh . boat as Mr. Lindsay. | Mr. Lindsay says Dr. Lake has no our orma owing argument. No, he has not, as far z as Mr. Lindsay is concerned, be-| cause he (Mr. Lindsay) apparently | } of Sp ring Modes does not want to see the truth as answer to the question then must be "that it was God's seventh day as Im. | mediately following the six days ot | creation. We are told that God | created certain things on the first | day, certain things on the second day, and so on till the sixth day, ou which He created man. The seventh day, then, was the first whole day ox man's existence, which he undoubt- edly spent in hallowed communion with his maker. Naturally then, and necessarily it would follow that' the next Sabbath would be the first lay of his second week of existence. And 80 of course it would continue all his life. Now when man forsook God «nd instead worshipped 'the host of heaven," they till kept their calen- dars correctly, and the first day of the week was still retained as the chief day for worship. Thence the name, Sunday, followed by Monday, lie. Moon-day, and so on, finishing up with Saturn or Saturday. Not wishing to speak arbitrarily or dogmatically, still I would sub- mit the following theory, (which 1 think is Scriptural, and therefore | historically true. Thé Israelites, | God's '"'peculiar people," had laws peculiar to themselves, and having been delivered from Egyptians bond- age on the last day of the week, when the command concerning the Sab- bath was given a second time, the reason for its observance was chang- | ed, so they were not commanded to | keep the Sabbath because "in six days the Lord made heaven and earth," as in Exodus XX, II, but be- cause they were brought out of Egyptian eervitude, ((See Deut. V,| 15). That a change in the reckoning | of time took place at the time of the Exodus is plainly stated in Ex, XII, 1-2. And in verse 16 of the same chapter we learn that for a time a! least they kept two Sabbaths, the first day of the week and the sev- enth, thus commemorating the com- pletion of creation and their deliv- erance from Egyptian bondage. When our Lord was upon the earth the Jews kept their own peculiar Sabbath, but when He rose from the dead upon the first day of the week, and the disciples met for worship on that day, and He met with them, and breathed on them, and they received the Holy Ghost,--then the original Sabbath was restored, and has been observ- ed by the Christian Church in gen- eral ever since. In reverting to the original firet day Sabbath, we cele- brate at the same time the comple- tion of the great work of creation and the still greater work of Re- demption. --JAMES LAWSON. Wheat Duty and Canada. Hamilton, March 11.--(To the Editor): Canada produces the best, most wholesome and nourishing wheat in the world. For its superior- ity, the United States people demand from 20,000,000 to 100,000,000 bushels annually, irrespective of price. The ' United States government seized on this fact to levy a duty or tax of 30c per bushel and on the 7th inst, added another 12¢ effec- tive 30 days hence, collecting from $6,000,000 to $30,000,000 tax an- nually, without noticeably "decreas- ing the consumption, With Canada supplying the fertile soil and improved seed, the farmers tilling and harvesting, and Provid- ence supplying the sunshiie and rain, who has better right to this tax than Canada, especially as we need the money for improved raliway transportation in the west? If there is any good reason why Canada should not put on a 30c ex- port duty, I should Ike hear ft, therwise should we not urge the government to try it gsnyway. It might be said that this would inter- fere with shipping our " wheat through the United States to foreign | Simply because the people who do With the opening to-day of our Spring Exposition, | breath when going upstairs, becomes | | Miss Almond Doolan and Marie Me- | Dr. Lake so ably puts it. May I! ask, if Mr. Lindsay is correct, why has he not got more followers? not believe in his views are just as | intelligent as he is. { : . . . a) : Bien 2 WC ANTE | Milady found all of fashion's latest expressions--those en | trancing creations that come only with this season of the WOMEN WHO ARE WEARY, Sats New Vitality Gained by Enriching . dt . the Blood. Frocks, Suits, Coats, Millinery, Accessories -- every- their days in a constant state of | weariness. They have barely suffi. | {ent gy to enable them to per-| . to dai, "Oh Gay thoughts of Spring have brought forth new mater- hing head, a miser- . . ; hey pe a ials, startling colorharmonies, novel touches -- all weav- feel as heavy as lead. The whole . . . toh is Tie bloodlessness. This ng their decorative way through the modes. anaemia, or lack of good blood, Thbre are Many Wolled who pes) thing for the shart woman to wear--is here! causes not only pale faces and white lips; it is the root of many of the pains and miseries from which wo- men suffer. It is said that anaemia causes nine-tenths of women's all-| me ee meme | Sponsoring Fashion's Favorites in td chin ded ashe First Authentic Modes in | No woman need suffer in this way. | It is easy to obtain a supply of rich, red blood by taking Dr. Williams' | Pink Pills. The new blood created | by these pills rapidly builds up the system; headaches and backaches dis- appear, -energy returns and the joy of living is felt once more, | You can get Dr. Willlams' Pink Pills through any dealer in medicine | or by mail at 50c. a box from The Dr. | Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Wolfe Island, March 8.--Farmers are busy hauling their hay and grain to Kingston and Cape Vincent, N.Y. H.C. Hogap, Reviers, NY. spent the | week-end wit s family in the vil- . . . lage. The many friends of Frank An alluring display of the newest version of the Cloche, Fawcett are glad to hear that he is i , . v . recovering from his recent illness. with tiny, roll brim front, which leads the mode for Spring. ' Donald, Kingston, spent the week- | end with friends on the island. | i thd es era] The Tricorne and, Turban are other interesting styles. N.Y., is visiting at her home here. Miss I. Cox, Howe Island, returned ; Favored fabrics are: to her school on Monday, which had . been. closed for two weeks. Sanford McDonald, after spending the win- 3 Vis S F i} * * ter in Watertown, N.Y, is home 1S ft w le S lks M l again. J. Webster, light house keep. cu ra at ! ! an er at Brophy"s Point, after spending | ' : the past couple of months in King- | F It N lty B ds B k k ston, has returned with his family. e rl ove rai an 0 Mrs. George Niles is seriously ill. wa Fariiews Are Busy, . The Directorie Mode--that colorful interlude in French S8| ppl, al « e far- mers are busy hauling logs, 'tele- e hy phone poles and box-wood, before history between the reign of terror and the rise of Napoleon the jsnow all goes away. Joseph . a has inspired many new models. : ston last week. Mrs. J. H. Fair, Sharbot Lake, spent a day with Mrs. 1 Shavit Laks, sponta dey with 3is. Black and Wood shades, Chinese Reds and Blues are the Olmstead and son are spending a : : few days with her uncle, A. Cassell, predominating color tones. Rokeby. v Mr. and Mrs. Russell Seargent a he hen] ATTRACTIVELY PRICED THROUGHOUT the latter's mother, Mrs. William : ; Steals, Just week: Me Ma We have pleasure in inviting your presence at this formal bur, spent the week-end with the * TE or oD Raper display to-morrow and Saturday! Mrs. R. McGonegal, and Mrs. J. Pal- a mer, Snow Road, spent Sunday at Mr. and Mrs. R. White's, Roberts- ville. Kingston's Shopping Centre"

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