Whitby Gazette and Chronicle (1912), 9 Jul 1914, p. 2

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

muedêWsa.re sprea4 with the wbiec henz'-ront now uxtil è-li' n' wrmnkled handc e!Ne- itmbrw1pec :thepà out,'The 'wild jnmloerIocomxing up, suinaO lu -.t~ ilba u'panioles, -the >ada-rii taniger Jg ealling, the Wood t'thxu'leh $~ 0b~'ng a pornuig a-dd-cf axi èvening. Neàts are dl o etyong-4 Motoring les goeod, but walldng le "better, Vfi has eyeeight.'and cars, lâ observant Q! detal, je on Ilad- imate terme wlkh the outdoore, is cabt easiaL. The walker le in the ,quick d! things- and the thick cf things1 . edoeesnet take 'in great empansea -cursorily, bub smal1 etretches oarefully.fRe caxi ae a bird4ln-the sky.and a - biessei on the tborn. Ne is Pumî4fixg freslh air.into 'his luagt and g ?tia& viser i nto, is legs. fis c uxpax iien l chee.rIuI- -nez&, hie patron i. go6od hedo,lth. Rie c0lim'bs-a- lia nd e'sSthseeout-- 'stretching valley; Le entera a wood and sineils its edors anid heaps its aongs. 'Ha, sees the a-slaes o! the sunlight axid le fii4ds the wood fern; h e h ear é Vhpcab bird mocking hlm; hoe sees the, flaeh o! the tiiU car- dinal; 'lie tirs uji ra-bbits and is eooded by qu irrels., Het.goee happily 'akjng evexi the dutsty' roads; lie is tanned by sun and wind; i e 'rests under the oak- -h ie fde' vild strawberries. Go walking. It's not tee hot and even 'the heat of a road li Julý'-anl the -coid of a read, la Janua-ry are net. tee heroie for thc endurance of oxie Who lias walked himeel! into the ha-rd libres e! healtli. And se, go Sir Frederick Treves,_ a noted -Britishi surgeen, said recently ithat ba-rd work accoua-te Mr more than biillia-ncy. If he 'had 'te asubnit te a najor -operation, lie addcd, le would clîaose a carefuihiard work- ar rather 'lia-a a brilliant surgeeon. Thèese rexaarks hive exci'ted sanie contreversy, but, after -al], du tbey, centa-in any real dupa-rage- ment e!,brilliaacy? Brilliancy, like geniua, lu an,'accid.en-t. It le bora, net nia-de. The warld would be a duil, flat plane inteliéetually if' it' did net throw. up 'brilliant peopie. Hfa-rd work weuld neyer have givea us Shakespeare, B3eethoven, Keats, Rleine,"- Po e, 'Shelley. But lard %Yorkjis'tIc staff o! life. On it we capnsourit, on it wc can rely. Har<. woiýk collecte data, assimila-tes thein, verifles. brilliant hypothesis, connecteaad comppletes -truthe per- ceivýed -in 'flashes." When the brilliant man is aise a Lard %vorker lie conquerg the 'word. ,Buit the slow conqUests of W*ion ail p'artefthe brauln ork preperly together, our.'consolons- ne»s el what i gon on ,in tihe wcrld round us is an èrderly eue; thingai are, as the dactars sa-y, iiproperlyl eoorduiatd." But if that câo-ordinatien le disturbed, the coxiscious-nese- gets xuddled,.thînga loe their relation te one ariother, and a~rthngbecomes t psy-tur- vy. That condition la ca-lied- deli- riumr, fron the Latin word for crazy ,and t is xiet a- diseuse in iteel!,,but a- syniptomn that ma-y complica-te ma-ny diseases. IV ma-y accompany same grave lira-la trouble, such -as- abscese or tumor, and ib is seen i nia-ny forms- <Y! iaaanity. Ia the forni cbf dcili- rinni tremenu, lt fllows acute pois- oniag by alcohoL1 Thexi there are delirium-ns that complicate such a-ete ixfectiaue disea-ses as typhoid lever, pneumoxiia-, diphtheria, and &carlet lever. 'Moreover, delirium is often ,prod-uced iby 'poisoqns in tiWi system; not. enly 'by poisons taken lato, -hestem ,but -by poisons !formed by the sy*ten2 ite'f, aeiný various 1kidxiey diseaasala'inc e 'body- loses ts as4 pwrte eliu]nate ita injurlous uqdst.o lioe counteëràcb,,'te'n eicly Thora is aiso the deliriu m>of coi- lapse,-'which is uexninl the later stages e! tarvatien or o! extreme exha-ustien. The cause that underlie a ca-se e! deliriuxn muat firat be found, beý. ca-use the -treatunent will vary li aceo:rda-nce witb it. Few o! us are calIed on ta deal with delirium tre- mens or with the delirium of! star- vation, or with tua-t terrible farn known as a-ente delirione mania, which generally onde la death. But thé delirium that aceompanies ty- phaid fevei-, pneunionia, or the a-ente infections fevers cof childhood is of comnnon -occurrence a-ad 14.je weIl te know tIat muci can be done ta prevetnt it, or ta bring re- lief alter it ha-s begun. Sedative treatment, scdi as a warm bath wi'th cold applications ta the héad, will often ward off an attack; but whexi therej .a great prostration of streagth, stimulation ie usually ne- cessary. Delirium ie always ex- ha-utiag; sec that the patiext's stzengthm le kept np a-e fa-r as pas- sible. And neyer leave a deliriaus patient alane, ev-ca for a minute. There are toa ma-ny cases, c! sick people falling fro eoçen windows9. The Care o!f tic Aged. - \e are ail o! as eager ta ma-ke: the ýla-at yea-rs o! these w-ho a-re near a-ad dca-r ta us as happy and cani- iarta-hIe au possible. Oid age, even when 'the health remains good, binge certain obvious disabilîties. As the old persan lias te give up ane activity a!ter another,' the daye grow langer and more barren, especially for thase who fand it di!- ficult te sleep more tia-n four or five heurs a- niglit. The e-amui of the aged is a pitiful t'hing. But nxuch can,, be donc te alleviate it. Sonetimes the ha-bit of waking ia the middle cf the night cati be traccd ta the wreing -sort af supîxer, or ta ton -or coffee oyr tebacce. Old people do not ike ta give up the habits cf a lifetime, and it je not wime te changé those habits sud- denly. But they ca-a be graduall1y modified. Occasionally it îe a-n ex- cellent thing to give a little stimu- lant in hot water juet before goiag Lf~ UU ~J4AILL ~ ~ >"~with wa-nrn water iîottIes. ,spondingly greater. Woe ta tihein- If the digestion is disturbed, ou- wlieexpeet brillinncy albac ta give riocially. ai iglit, itry the slow sip- ,thorn the auccese thait la worthy a-ad ping of a- glass cf wa-rm water sith endu rinK, a- little bicarbonate of soda dissolv- o______ oUil it. OlUd people often drnift jnto, the habit o! akiag ne exercise TO DIkplÂ*y GPIl FINDS. cof àny kinU; that is a mieitake. Cinly - tîxose who tako a- little exorcise ne Ceé i>scoveriet4 IVili lie littir-evory day.can ke'p in a- reasanable 1 d lu London. condition of health. If -the weatber Tfrebonon Scicy cf ' - is ha-J, a few minutes' geale axer- TeLno oi-ty-fAntîquai- ds svrl tnesa aywl -ies wili sOoanholà .'atBurlington t,8 mvaintin iealt wll lP Hfoue. an in'Vrestliag exhibition o o ant 'alh a-nUprevenît VIe the papyrean a-xd os-hon fragments gtfnia-g o! tie muscles. cisco'vered- by tue, Egypt Explora--SOme very old people arneaira-id ÃŽlin Fund ai Antinoe, Oxyrhya- -0! an open wiadow. To na-g thern chas, 'a-nU then sites cf ancient civi- about the neceiseity o! vrentilatio)n Uzatien on the upper rea-cles o! tic usually does more harn than good, Nileo, hundrecls ço! miles souli o! fbut îs they mmmve& frei noîe rooni ta Ca-incv-anotIon Uuring tue day it is gemer- TIat huma-n nibturc ha-e net alter- aly possible ta- give a thoîcugli air- ed mach ins ehown by en orde-r for ia-g tQ the r'oeam they 'have juet left. a-n inquesti on a slave wlmo lad falien' The clethiiîg cf cld people should off the« rou! o! a liuse la ht aai- le liglt, hut 'warn, a-nU alwa-ys1 'ýèt'yto secÛre a- gecd view o! soie lbase. i-i'iy, buit ait prolonged, d4noiîg girts; a-n annonnemqnt o! m' .psa-go le usefui,;ILt ocôupies the sema atliletic -sports; allusions te a4ention cf tue aged; it reste horc. r.ung,-->. let o!fiartic-I-le! Let thlém,, a-ad at the saine tine gives with a- local pa-wnbno>ker, -a-nUa- theni gens-le oxercie.-Youth's eurieus iùdict«neat by a wife o! a Companioxi. cross-grà41ued hasba4d iWho refuwed ta give hethe flîiholseh d k3y s a-nd bQltea the <loar 'men the ha-cl oné - Shirclmîg Work. oneto te urcis. -Sirking iu a kind ef etealiag, The prej5aramions ommxin n "no- and ai mighty mca-n kind. riFor eome rna villages on the oceasien of the one ha-s te deo-be work or eome <ene i'isit of a membe'r 01 Parliaiment bas Vo suifer bçeause it isait Ukne. bave a&n $ntiresin'g pot iyen a WJiatever y.oudo cden'V getito the 1eVo.orerpg T*4 cyo o -théJway -of shirliDngMi ing n~is ne- jýa 4yo eve ryVhm9g rwsl yf o m1Sspxrbefçr mre lm- ii i ýýWt of a Rman Seuator, incladiag trUbie -ef VIls old world, lia-If the #whiý<n ht¶hhe Was liotO wçrk tVia-'b b,41d.cone, hl-f the th cr rocodiles. These vivid g14 'tktJ4a-jhappn hrigi Wet.Di«eal .na-puhots aem Vo, bninig p-iccelike U4i-ing. lb grews 6W@ kad .upab-of GraeO-» = blrond liardçr to shake off, a-nd Fgypt ver~y near, graa~ully it e$lns to louse y-ou anc ïq1r 1nkiçse eur job, youi-self- rjxspeç-bi- nuuehtu- eos any atihex 45 <~o&~[e-1, ye, - Db. u4u' l e piu1I.crea- ýUoste sz1-_Augoheiýplece o!i nince tare, and shtrlda niaahes more f ail- pie o t-eee $ ares in lue Vii hei gta. tiies show, Ge-orsft haxultantly hey 1)mnS'it on oa. lot of otr çýeW t, u t b' ueut -l3 ieroto! the Text.- Mark '10. 45. Verses 32. And -they were o way, going np te JernýaLeai. greater, number e! lemea pas we have etudied thas fàr; Vtil deal with incidents which ccc axid leasoas which were'I given ing Christ'», last jounxey frein ice ta Jerusa-leni. The rout4 circuitous and doubtlegs Cece aeveral menths. Jeaus wa-s goixig before thein thjy wore amazed-Jesus i se. f reely with hie disciples th this ocqça-ien, when lie walked f rom them -and did net coniau hie thoughts, thcy were surj a-ad were unable to, expia-il maxiner. No doubt his mni occupied with thingu whic knew they could noVt clea-nly i stand, anxd with whieh they probably -net be i synipathy. They that followed were a-! 'Others -eof the cempa-ny, beaid, dicpewere awed by3 dëieeair *and though th-oy ! ed lhlmi tbýy dkdit wthfea-r Re tooh-aa"in the twvelve-f 'Wg & r~o! -e effeOoù n ho~ egpreduCed 1' the strangx nner, Jesuns agaixi join~ compa-ny cf hs disciples sud to sha-ro with theni hie thougl garding the criais a-waiting th Jertisa-len. Matthew says VI teok the disciples a-part, th, away fTtrae icr-et cf the fal 33. This la the third time Jeasus b-ad annouaced bis pass the disciples. The deta-ils aaa bore anad in verse 34 cerre clesely ta the events which tock place, that 1V la posail writer recordod bis laten clI dexsta-nding o! the impont of Jesus said, nathon than the ii siennia-de -wben the words spoken. St.- Luke sa-ys, perceived wI'at lie said." suppose Jesus te h-vo spoken tino iin veiled prophecy, wv botter understead the ýncensi dema-nd ina-do by Jàmésana-d1 The chie! pricats a-ad thes -Repreacnting the Sa-xhedr the goernin'g council o! the Beore ths ceuncil were tri more importa-lt iuses comn the Jew.ih -kiw. Shall ieliver hinm unto th4 tiles-Tîlils had not be-canmer i the éarlier predictions - death o! Jasas. The Roma did net permit the Jews to' a deathl sentence; lt reserveo, self this night. 34. IScoargiag-wlth a w ma-ny la-hes-was an invania-) cempaiiiment -o! crucifixion. weuld iaturally expeet Vo be cd, beca-use hie cIa-in ta ho would excite the, ridicule o! t diers a-ad the unriendly p but this predictien au a- wboe te reet on seniething moe ordinary foresigbt, aiacc l conld 4now defiaitely wha-t ti ,maxi govêrnor weuld do, ar defiaite tume o! the resurn was, oi course, a revelation. 35. James.a-ad John, the Zcbedce-In Mark I. 19 and 4. 21 we leara that these br were fishermen, that hey mendiag their nets La t.heir bc the Sca of Galilce when Jesi called them, a-ad th"t they hi their father anid the liired se a-ad followed him. They ha< partners witli Simon a-ndAi who woe calicU 'at about thç timo. Their mether was narni birne (sec -Matt. 27. 50.; Ma 40). She wae one o! the i who followed Jesus li Gauile îaiaistcred bc him, o! their eib: te 'Jesus -with a simila-r nî (Mat-tV 20. 21). The fa-et that I whilo on the cross, comumende mother to John, supports theo41 tia-t tlîey were rla-ted.- We would tha-tithon ashoulU for as whateýoever wo shah tîxe-This coma-ad ecens mnf ceasiderate, csp)ecia-lly sunce, ha-d just speken cf bis appraxk trial anad smfferng. t shows lis tea-cuiig could not have dlcarny comprehended. 37, The disciples mia-y have1 litera-lly Chist's words a-bet twelve s-monos (Meit. 19. 281 38. Ye kacwrnet what ye.&'a their -imagination, 'xea-rne Christ iiiea-at -honor. Jeas that t mca-at suffering; Are yé a-hie te drink the cur I drink 1-This jluaa- gutr&ti, pression, ,referring te ",,a1 POrtion in life,"111> &87vhen the, lut sa-Ys, '-"My -cuxp nnnnethl Jesus unea-ns Vo,,as kJamSs an< if tilicy are a-hle te' aae the Sa-ny sacrifices o! bis port-ion., Toclie baptized with Vhe b i that I a-m baptized with-An figurative> expression ýcoxveyi sa-ne thought,, wlth -ho tl1a)Vght <4f thie overwhelMingj of tIc. calqitily iwaiting ïtii 39. Thoug-ubçJ 14rtandingm pi the maiinge!f Ciritiea Jamefia'j~Johnrempliecl, Nî :able, a-ad Jesue tecok them a iword, Heknkew that they have te 'chia-ne lus sufferang i year- u rred idur- Ga-li- Ewa-a mpied ngled a-4 en apart lica-te riscc hi£ îwae mho acier- vould as the bus's5 llew- disci- 6u8 cf d the begaxi ta ra- at h-e ut le mwers. îthat lion te gîven nd se later le the Ir un-ý wbat uprer- 'were "They, If we at the icaxi dora-te John. eribes ixi, o r Jews. ~d Vhe under Gen- tiond fthe n la-w iecute .to it- up cf île a-- Jeas mô&k- iking me sol - ecpbe; seçms than o one îe Ro- ilthe ,ectien me e!i Matt. o>thers we re i-at on s5 had id left rvants drew, sa-me !d Sa- *k 1Cûr. e- a-ad k se heory est do iek of et la- Jeas bwing ethat been taken SkIn ýsu- to knew ip that e ex- nocès- Lptimi iotîer îg ahe adWoul ýf Wer1 -nêm, -and snfluen,"e counte to1, 41. Thue ton .-. began' to be. moved wjýh indig&tion-Jamnes end John -were -:ntri)dueixig poitieal inathcd for their, cwn advancemnt. The ten naturaliy reaeated this. 42. Jesus celled ltiienI tohlm-i Ho 'la-c beeèn-epea-kîng'Vo Jam£e andî John eniy.- Hearing the-objecions'- on the part ofe! Ii ther disciples, he caU>1ed them to explaui to ail the twclve the br'ad prunciples upoé_n which greatne-ss -in Es kungdom Lord it over thern-The rulerrear lords or masters, anxd the people bocomo their servants te de their will and te minister to their plea- sure. 43, But it la net so among yen- In ÇhriWts kingdem greatnoss is net wen by cempet.ltion *and self- aasertiexi, but by werking fer the ConunQn good ; -by making a state of &ociety in which thes strong help te bear the, burdexia of *the weak, and tlie. welfare 01 evêry - -indlividual le considered ip Mîiusgter-Oxie -wliserves, though this werd dees net indicait" his i'e- latiexi ta the persex iwhon, ieh. serves. 4.Servant-Tha-t le, bondua2r- vaxit, ono who la under obligation or helds a personal relation te those whom ho serves. This Posi- tion in Cbrist's kingdom is higher than th-e position of minikter, who dees net hold *the personal relation- ship. 45. For the Bon of man aise cane net to ho mlnietcred unto, but te minister-The S-on o!fnman is net ex- empt f rom the rule stat-ed. "i.; kingship is aise t.hat of service, and net that e! iordship." To give hie lfe a ransom',for ma-ny -Christ's life is the prie by which men become free. This was true of bis. life in a sen»e in which lb is net truc of ot-her lives-, though the werid has net been without its herces and heroixies, especially on the mission fields, who have given their lives the1 other4 might ive fuller, truer lives. Ri1ch, la-ndsoie, a Sportsman anîd - a Statesman. Sir Adamn Beck! The new title sounds familiar and natural right a-t the utart; for Ontario's "Minis- ter e! Power" is associa-ted i the ;public mind with more tlian a touch e! the knigtt#ne'ss o! the old, old days. Wbexi the people-Coaservu-tivc's and Liberals slike-think of Adamn Beck they think oi a gen,tena-n poli- tîcan-a broa4-gauge, wise, kîndly maxi doiag things naturally oun a higb plane . ]kcause lie is aise rich and liandsoeonaid well-dressced a-nd a siportsman 'o! the higheest type ho stands as a unique figure in the Provincé . He is about the nearest a-ppmrach we have in Canada toaa Lord Rosebery. ,And as a ina-Uer cuf fa-ct Six- Ada-m has taken the 'great British states- man-politician fur a mode?. Ho once said to an interviewer: "Like Lo4rd Sir~ Adam Boeck, K.B. Rlosebery I ilad as a boy ilînco great ambitians. Oaa wae tw marry the mout bea-utiful lady la Canada, a- other was to wia- the Kiag's Plate. a-ad the othor was te lie in pllties." These were tihe ambitions of the son o! an obscure Ontario fermer. For Sir Ada-m wa-s bora fifty-seveii ears a-go, on June 20, a-t Baden, Waterloo County, -wben thrcîîgh a-ll that country roitgI farnis were juîst eîasrgiag frein the bush. Ho 'lia-s real i7ed bhis amnbitian s-exelpt the Kiag's Plate. Ho wea-t te uchool la Ga-It. Hie ma-de hie fortune as a iaxnfatarar cf voaeening a-nd thin lusuber a-ad cigai' boxes , with f ac- tories ' în London, Toonato, Mont- Éeal, a-ad Wianipeg; He is the big ma-n o! London, Hie has-served a-ev- ena-I year»'à.s-Mayor a-ad ha--sdônc ma-ny thinge to benefit s-ha-t i-y. Aay éhild in tieplace wiiIitell yexî Wlere, Vo finci thç Bocek homie, with t. bea-ntifai eettiag.gl<rou-niia nd tres, ,'wherelio a-ad LaUy.-Beok baU a-n ideal dornbtie lifo, Lady Beck wa-a MXiss Crerar, a member cf Vhe Wea4ItliY a-nd .,-socially promnexit Ha-,mil!bon fqeiily.1 She tgakes a- 'great lptere&t la Sir Ada-î's hobby -tise -ç>wnirrg -ad cehiitng cf siplendid jihrses, udIoth are fa'mwi4-nfigures aithtie 1horse tshows o!1 len4oa n..d' New York as well As in ii pada-. Kr Aý,aniBock lias eprnésenteU b4ondo nxxitic .Opte-rie Legielatuire eicia-m10. lu 19Ã"31te w-a-s appoint- eda <0M'm1s-sioXIer Vo devolop Nia-- ;val, ne. bn- is no oner amatter cf oaVe- tion wlith him. A mnater wiln'vt pocrtfolio dces not get the 45;,ý00 sal&rY o .'Cà;biqiet -Miniter. fSir Aclam getse only the $1,Wo0 inàem- nt f 8a privote meaber, and ýf be ba'ctberm a mani of g1ia~t wealth lie oould neyer lhave arri6d o4 this Pet~ -scheme as 1ihff has. They ay he lias sacrificed e-4ortune fr Vile ake of h19 ide&,. The ".Miniâter of Pewer," ' a be is poÉul-ar1,y known, 'ls not a taiker. H1e wilIIgo a long way to a.void Ïna.k- ing a speech, which is one reason wliy hie namine emfooee idiely kn~own a/meng- ;fhe people $han he ishe ' self. ne le.ads a meat temperate and simple Jife, new-er teuching liqur or tobaeoo. I>,rhaps thS i 0 why he leeks uo-clean-out aaid ert anid fully ten years younger than his' age. Tfhe Inquisitive Crowv. Mr. Moe-kioz was a mani who lk- -ed chemi'atry. After hehad studied al that other people knew abbut, he hranched out and startied e.peri- ments of his own. After a, year of labor he finally perfectedl a liquiid which he cailed 'Elixir of Energy." He was so disgu'sted with bis 'lazy servantâ that every xnorning; he would mardi them into his labora- tory -and give each a tablespeonful of the elixr. Then they would be seized with an irresigbiblIe impulse tvo labor at their daily taska. Af ter taking thie, they wouk.1 imynediate- ly Lall to work and neyer stop al day. There was a crow tliat sat outsidc the ]aboratory window several mornings, and saw Mr. )&1oskioz lad ing eut this elixir. "I wonder what that lu?" it thought. Finally, one nlorning Mr. Moi- kidz Ieft the window open. The crow stuck his--,hpead in and drank and immediately feit the desire .,to work. He 'Iooked aroun'd the la- boratory, but cou'ld sec nothing te. do. Se he flew on, into the kitchen-. with itier caréestsness, or irer- I Hlm (4od ha t ül ence isbhe token of a shial'low nind. [Him«eL.- der 1 wonder ýif in this iday ef!coin- jiuhed the grou~p of lfâ11Fré mercialism'sa -eupre macy in the philoqophero to - Whxoh. he9Pl-6>è, realn' ! acinad Éthe"Inordinàte bkdeelaring. 11 defjýyro L t É>pn4brance. of phyaical scienOce prepare & tale e s imple and4 la*ithe ' in the reaini o! thbuglit w*e are giv. saine tinie s50 ubJime anS1d5o,'toù1ch2- ing due thoâught ta the siiua l-ingais the 'tale- of;LileO- pOasioli-and. -m >eMt in oxar interpret*batieio!'o lifei deatb e! Jesus Chlxiat."1' And Aet If ;we aie net, c, 4 n oet ~fo1b -forget fi& waRousseaUivWIIP s.nd ~ ~ r selu fort -formn a jusit ap- M t(l ifie V! and destli o!f'So- prédiation of Jease-Christ and the crates were 'I'hose. of &a-sage the life- place wvhich He -ias acquired inl and death ço! Jesus were those' of a- beth civie and philantilroýpy, as «cd." Nàpeleon -said, -, dý:very- weii as in conimerce àand ethics, lu thing in HlMî aatonleheS M8lO well'warth -while. B-et'ween Hlim and whiatever el" It is no, easy thing to ferin a just li the, world there 15 flo poQ5ib'- aippreciation e! Jesu's. None of us terni e! comparisoi,py axid'CGôethie ever uaw Hum in the flegl-. Few of "I conaifder the- gospele to, be thor- us have even visited the-iand wiiere oughiy genuine,ý for in them i Lathe He *was born er mingled wibhh it effuigent relçctîon of a . sblinuitY people and custonms. We are de- which emanated f rom the persoxi Of pendent on ot.hers for is lifeasborýy, Chriab' eand thbis is as divine as ever and what we tbuik ef the 'ilfe which thIe divine appeared on at.le Hli ived, o!fRis teachingga a.o>t nan declared, .'Wboibever- may 'b. odand life and du'ty, of Ris t)w éurpris-esof thte futuTe, Jesus claims and Hi5deeds-oûr opinionwiiner eupae<" - 'o ! &II such t in g s m ust be f rm ed X i A ( 8 ' a! rm e., at ecend-hand ' 13utbthe greaittest cf Jeaus îs that- Historie Reaàlity of XSUî which eachman can make 'i,,the toranandtheJewsh ewîh ~ -aboratory of bis ownliteý. Receive torffnan 'te ewshTalmud re-, in your owxi experiee. iab- cognize Jesus' historie realiiy, anid ity te transform a-blataut eoward - the -latter acceunts fer Rie -mira-,ixito a 'brave Christilan leaderï,-' le-s -by the exercise of magie learn- change a narrow-imiire*d- 'ýfaùatre ed in Egypt, while Tacitus, the La-t- ntoaa br othe r eo! hum aIk'ity-, tbina-k. in historian, and 1'liny tihe Young- a niinistering- -saint of a won¶an of er incidentally 'testify 'Vo fis death the street&, is* not confined'to the- under Pontins ilate, -and Hie wor- «days o!fRis fleeli. ,These miracles ship by the 'Ubristiane as God, Cel- O!fgrace-arebeing wroigit in every sus, in the second ýentury, the first f ]and on _e&'rth to-day. 11111hen "Philosopher - to Write Yeu can try 'Christ -out for your- agaItrst Ohrict.ianity, Uiakes some self. Give ýupyour sinful life. take eighty quotatiexis frein the New' Hie as yotr leving iSaviour -and Testament or allusion.s, to incidente Lord, and ýtry ta relive Hifï life narrated in it, and se confirme the aining men . Yùu WAIl find, Hlm existence of the four gospels a-t that ufficiexit for ail your neede and as early date. The historical feature sugo sHewr.Vnwllscnb ci! t'he life of Jesuz, in otlier words, ea-ying, as did eve n the -brilliant lare authentie, and as -reliable as Unitarian, Williami Ellery bhan- the data connected wit'h a-ny other ning. "The more. 1 know of .Jeffus historical charaoter, whatever be' thelesu I 1ca-n s-pare Hini, and the yeur views on New Testament in- plac e which HRe fils in my 'heqrt, the spira-tioxi. quickening , office which fia eharac-. Here a-nd there among the great1 ter perforins, is ta nme neoinean thinkers of hist-ory. have beexi those proof ef Hie reality an.d Hie super- who have called Jesus -a fanatic or 'huma-n greàtness. The grand mira- an mmpoter. But most e! the great cle is the perfect divine -ehalracter men o! -the race ha.ve given Him ai o! Christ)~ Rev. 7oteph A. place ef unequaled supremacy. 1 Vance. ASSA SAINATlO'N 0 F lULERS49 'lic 'Niîxber WVho Have Been lIllcd lu Recent Years. 'lîhere neiDugna upa ins'tel Folio wing is a list o! raiersana-d per pot. knocking it over imaote Mnistr sasntc ic 85 stcw, The cook after scoldinîg, MAUtralia Lnoa, Prident8o! picked it eut and cha-soUthe cl'ow. tîm Uxiited Sta-o, APridentiS of The ,inqîxisitivo crow was very' the Uiedan te!sy, Gove14, nor5 f ightened a-ad fiew back inte the Geacral o! ladia-, February 8, 1872. la-boratory.- There lie eaw a bowvl Abidul Aziz, Sultan -o! Turkey, w'hîch looked empty, a-ad hid in it. June 4, 1876. Bu1t it was filoUd with un invisil1 "Eliir o La-zneas" Th Alexanader Il., Czar o! Rusýa-, "Eixi ofLaznesq."Thecrow Mardhi13,1881. brea-tbed in sonie o! the elixir,' a-d James A. Garfield, President O! thon tried ta get out o! the bowl. the United St.ates, July 2, 1881. He strnggled but was overeenie. Marie Francois Sadli-Carnot,, When the c:>ok ca-me ite the la.-on- Preusident of France, Jane 24, 1894. atory, 'ho fonnd the poor el-clcrW Nazr-ed-Din, Shiah e!f Posia, a-ad killed hiTn. AMl t-hie was due Ma-y 1, 1890. te the crow' a inquisitiveness. Sta-nisla-tîs qta-nbouloff.-p renier - -of Bulgaria, July 23,- 1895. TIhe' Wro,îg Butitoix. anas-as dol Caetille, Prime Mia- "l)ear mie," sa-id littie Janet, 'l igter of Spain, Aiuît (51 1897. buttnedjustonebuttn wong Juan Idia.-ite Borda. President o! buîtaedjut nebîtvn rcg,' *Urîîgîîay, Auigust 25, 1897. a-nd now that ma-kes al tie Test go Jose aiaRya- Barries, Presi- wroag," a-ad elie tuîgged a-ad, fret- o Mrienty ted as if the bîzîton was at fa-uIt -enVof Guatemala, leb. 18, 1898. for her trouble. "Patience, pa - £ip resu Elizabeth cf Aust.ria-, tiecemy ear- sa-id niamna-, Sept. 10, 1898. 'i'Thé m dea, 1Humbert, King e! It.aly, 1Juîîy 29, comng ta tic rescule. 'ThD aex tume look cuit for the first wrong;WIin cily rsdn i buttan. then youî will kecp a-ill the iUaited Stt-cne, ept. 6, 1901 rest igbt.ý' And added ma-ama-. IeUAe- atesngoSet. -, 9 md -'loo<k ouît for the. firet wrong decd Queadr,Jingeofl. 1903.an o! a-av kind; anoîlier, aad another Gve rarGc& ne l.Bob19k03. mu .sIîî.e to foliow" Janet thoîight Finland. June' 16, 1904. for a moment, timon she rcmembered Von Plehve, ]psaiMiîist-er -o! how o day, not long a-go, sue thie Iaterion Juîly 28,-190-1. struck baby Alice. That was the CarIas, King -cf Portugal, Feb. 1, frst %roag decd. Thon she Uenied 1908. ha-viag done it. That was another. Prince Ito, cf Japam. Oct. 26, Thon seue wa-e unlhappy a-ad cross 1909. k aIl da-y heca-tîse euie had telU a- lie.* Yi WVai Yîîng, «Premiier of Korea-, Wha-t a long list of buttons fa-stenl- îec. 21, 1909. ed wrpng jli!,t becauxue one wa-s Ha-mca Ca-ocres,. Prcei4doit cf wroag. Sa-nto Domingo, Nov. 19, 1911. Peter Stelîîîia, Premier o! H uis- l3ýjelIvelux Yourself. 'Si&, Sept. 14, 1911. If you coasider you-rgelf a Worm Jase Caialejag, Prime- Miaisiter cf thc dust you nmut oxpeet people cf Spa-n, Nov. 112, 1912. te tramplo on yoa. If you ma-ko a Francis I. Madero, Pir ieent of doonmat cf yocuruel! people ara sure Mexico, Feb. 23, 1913.- Wo wipc their feeot on you. More cf Fe ine Sua-nez, Vice-President aiea fa-il throîîgh ignoranceofo their o Mexico, Feb. 23, 1913.' stregththa t rouh .knoledeo! George I., King e! Grocce, March stherehaneu. ou ma-y segeadof8,1913. wbcn othande net believe la you,18Mabmond Slievket Pa-sha,Grand uterwhen yoaer do n et býinouev Vizier- o! Turkcy, J une il, 1913. iuner our elf. Toudoniot o! i Fra-az Ferdina-nd, Crown Prince who wimhes to see fully for lîlîsel! !AsnaJnf8 04 how the Ua-nk aide cof life boocks is ' like tha-t cf the mniaa who tock a Mia-rk Twain Agali torch ite a powder mulI to sue' whetlmer it would rca-liy blow np or l h orec n !helc not.-Dr. O. S Ma-rd-cii. tare tripe (Mark Twain a rrived a-' i-e..-.,l-en,.ot' a ,,n tj,', ha eldsr. The largeut -mafsscf ice ia the world lu probaubly the coewhich fille up nearly thewlie!tI interiai o! rs enand, where it ha-s accuýau- lated sînce hefere s-le 'a-wn e!fhie- tory, It is befloveci teo Icn a b ock Q00,000 square' miles in 'area, ail Vo a-vçFagé a milè pnçla l, f n1p eIç- nets. Acc.ording ttýe e~satg4.i 9s Vie lupmp -cfice sla grAren .L'- teu thaxtthe whole o! ciwte Ie eitterrcoel' tbo Vit-ýe 's jn~4 o! Croat Bnri'tga4n n4 Irelah,4 winth 4- layer a4b t ~ liî tik On Grahla-mi Isa-p, B.C., dni lers fan ail went dcwn 850 foot gan,4l utmuek hot wate'r, "You're 'a-- tra-ager?"VI-sked' di barber, "Yes," 'Mark _Twgin re- hav-c beenhler'e," "You coose, a gçe0d tipie Vo coma,'y'lthe 'b(vrbej cea-finucUd. "Mark'Tw 'nxis ageln ta reaU ànd lectuire ýo-n gt.%Yçu'l e ~ I'yo If b'euglit yoiir tic et V' Z t et " "p'evýery.t1hmisl -o't on.You'll have t-ô'St4jmd2x "tç vr aînyag," MarklTi in- pal, whlm ek s h " nver aaw p Whlck. Iel w ys aveVo îtand When tua-t ello'w leeures." <If'Haseems e ' owanderihg i ls mia-cl" "Then ÃŽhoe an't stray xî,ya-y Fasillhon'-Hints- Se(vIý ihl'Pariasiiojîps. Foulard Ïha-s rensserted itelif as Ione a! the leading eilk's. - Some -of the pnettiest new gowns are now mýîde o! whîite -milin. Messaline pnincees-.ý slips are la- deiand once more to wear la tder' lingerie $go*as. Ooýld broca-ded chiffon ma-kes s-aie of -the prettieist bodies te the sani- m ner evening gowns. A pure lenian yellow b-tite frock was trimmed with heavy ha-ad oni- broidered linen. An cdd littie new sait ha-a stnaight coat fluîlshe4 wt ufl o! the sa-me materia] Striped sîîk dresses ai- a ade oA striped silk, with sca-laopeci floiinces a-nd natty little haleras. 'd At prescat the eafeet sort of hanad ha-g ta choose le a-leather one, flet a-ad thia and shallow. Mare and more femiaismin l dis-; played in a-Il apparci for woeca a-nU it affects mat anly matenial but line, A'new faeliioacld colla-r"le one cf the boutway.s of! crsua-ing- a coat o! la-t yea-r ta assumne the, effect o! Paris le aow woaring black velvet ha-ta tnimmed with rases anci foli- a-go fashioned of! wite mousseline.- llox-plea-ted tuinice and flounces are beingfeatared on costumes de-- signed byPaqiln, Ca-îlot, Promet, Beer a-ad Poiret. A Ueligh't!ul imp6nted ha-t - was 4simpIy covored' with em-brcideëî,ed chape; ite oaly orna-ment a knot of flowene wshich pneciselyia-telied the pattera-. Lace camisoles o! fine- hand-cin- hroidered lingeries are aow rua witlthe na-rrowelt, cf bla-ck gros- grain rihbon tha-t shows plaîaly tibroaglitransparent blouses. Net'la 1cr 'liuie, One day Mn. uiI -cnttebuy a bushel o! buckwheat -fo swinig.' The -ma-a who -sold the w'heat wa-s a-way, bat hie wife uxadertaok ta, wait on' thfqustomer.i 4e on -peck mesure',aadtliey went to the gra-nary. She AileU i'tue mesani;e twvice1. a-d" pouriîng the'coitentsi tthe bag, begaxi tei'ticÃŽIV up. "But, Mrp. La-w-on,",sa-id -thé. ma-a-, "1% talces Leur'pecks te- ma-koý d'oh, ,doeiý "i-V ?" roplieëd -thé wo., n, ineaurirg erauw 'ibefoýv I zmat. rii Mr.La-wtoxi, I alwaye tanghb' school," I- Ii iOtlier WrS «I a- ne-t ashame'd ta sa-y't-bat _ ydte as njr jwife t-binice 1 owht t.Q 'I-. tee li as -more..iuuieihan ha-veo- te'xdy po litica-l condâtiong, a-nU 1 a-m er!ectly willilig Va ao cept her.juý,gment," YInu othe Weorde,- 'yen ha-ve t'le courage o!f your 'wi!e'n coiiyle, WOor' ena-in, m ýd'a side r, kra-lysis & iAusten NIIEWiS Il A liUTS11E CaliIa, the Empire Ge(eneral -Bl w4ý -Canada-. The - Ca-na-dian -n <e deoet ,all foreigner -char.ges ;>n 'thie jub1ic. Ma-Ion R. W. Leoxinan from the Nationali Trffl Ernest Au1stin. a yco public thoreuiglfare, carbo'lc îciJ. rister. wae fined $25 a MaisîtratIýudd fur se latter mad-o a face ami cxx -i -o! cross-examil county court case. A_ i uîing by Chairmi 1ÃŽusin ess witjî <le Gave] a-asw-cr a- stmmons, grea the PlrfIal)einto the ost Join VaIley ,R-Iîlway -ch1a-rgc-s. again.t Prei H *arv.'% L. Virgil, -an saI sman, wlif iLIled M, mani. a-etreet sweper, liai down i n a- miidaig Vjan'ouver, 'a- give'h ha-If ycars in priso4n. The Onta-rio c i Dca-!, meetinig in L.ondU a- resolutiain asking. thi Coverani t ifa ý rmove- - the -Dominion f rom the -o! undesira-bles 'a-d a-na- tinue thc aýgita-tien t4 -ta-no Goverament- octab f<4 a-ged a-ad infirin'de-;i -Great Britaii Nationa-lists axîd.ha: a,' serions clashi at"-Orno -Sir.Benjamin 'to1e tho National Plufrffýgrîi Association. ig dJ id. Ed'nuînd' Pa,. ne, a (,,)i k-nown te Englisii tlieat dea-J, a-geJ' 'çiý Eifty tliousand if., ed, lia-ve bern lande1 tinai. tîiirelardî. T<lieI cislias x% ix and a-i l1 iiîodJ'1 wg ' the l~ri4o!' tîxe vil(.wil mt "rs ti -)- Augustine Birrý11. tarty tor Ir-elanxd. 4t 1otv,.zs o! the Irish XaWt, 1<The é Unioiiit-s M lxit Lox'ds are a-xîxim.uis fý i anad carny cettlrnxnýiît < rule qLesi(iomn. Un"îited stm )Meflnllisq Tenn.,wl fer. oicxry.rat killeci. Lassen 'Pea-ka vm Bluff, cal.,issidcx It e enittl ýVa-siirgton tila- the Ui îë aboitto iit cifei-' a v Rlà.ytica troubles. According te an inteq the. income-tax la-w. wh, [lis finail-cial A ' Ade'pa-t'1î ion ataas to lbiýS tey trol o! the rv-lxs c! Cornwall, new hein;q ed for hlm liv the hiig, cumiula-tiens o! whiclw -ant-gg o! over ' liag. Fron an auLlthoni tage is being ta-exi o!f etateoef:-ie inarketLs t' -wlich two trustees o t>udhy esta-te consid.l-r the preseat pricos.. The wh& )are inspired -ad Lard lkVe1-toke- -in George's a-ecesýion ihai TORONTO uxurI&Lutmi i Oountryl a.

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy