;-@a_' -'.- n w». mitt itt m grunt knit-Hilts" llliirlll” ’ III Sill " Pusan h.haaaa, 1 wt: modlehso $1.21!? "Soothe aSwelilnga usually inflamed mean tissue. Abeorfine, Jr. gently rubbed on the nwollsn Canadian; National Qailtue._l_ll§ "NATIONAL" * saves ' THE WAY W. K. ROGERS, City Ticket Agent W. 7A.. FLYNN “l Medical School and Hospital RISTER. IOLIOITO Money to Loan‘ Oamoion emu ‘ - ‘ J. Palmer, K. O. Ian-Mere. Etc. um, to Loan Charlottetown, P. l I ‘ if‘ 9'1“ ‘J. Iarriatar and lelieloor, George ltnet pllacDon . ~ B. A. idlng, Charlottetown Diseases " m» _ ouns oattv "tale-m. puowsv 1o LOAN A. B.,,H. D. enary ruaerdisaia least-tut "UM" it‘ IQ. . sa- three yaaI all Bus} '1 consulted several . gpdfigy did not do In I I nod one box of "leads andtwoboxuWFr-hit-e-ivl" - kitiamarvellooabeeeaeele an! Salve" an tlanaadlfalnllfil w sure/Kings ALL nd Reservations Arranged by Station Ticket Agent -__-d . C. C. Archibald h sum on N. v. Poet Graduate rk R.McGuigan,BA n.5, s-ro. of Nova aeotla Iulldlno t’ . srrnwssr, K. 0' UNI! Iolloltore for amnion leak el ald 8t McPhee IIIIIIU» all!“ Itiblt IDP, leileiit: Neill! PW"! P. I. Island .' billet Garrison sunny‘ School Lease l n ‘ma. woman-Katee on THI eassxrn ‘Lesson l. January 1. Golden Text: Wherefore it is lawful to do well n the Sabbath daym-diatt. Xll. 12. - Lesson Text: Luke Xlll. 10-17. lllor entire lesson see Luke XIII. "The Time: in November or Dec em-her 1A. D., 29. the third- year of Josue Christ's public ministry. Rises: Somewhere in Peraea the country east of the Jordan. ‘A 7555"" 9t. Luke. in this thirteenth chap- eandt-hmhllbollflnfill- ter oi his Gospel, reports a series pi Jesus’ words and deeds while on» l-iis way through Persea, on ‘ills final journey to Jerusalem. The account hos especially sacred sialriflcuatce because of the neat approach be the time of our Lord's death. “And l-le was teaching in one oi the synagc-nues.” Anyone in the oomgrerztt tn enight be asked by the r-ul- ~ of the synagogue to preach, or lnirizt wk the ruler for u" ' to preach. "And behold there was a woman which had a spirit of infirmity eighteen years." ‘lthere were apparently two elo ments in her case; one physical. spinal curvature, or dorsal para- lysis; the other nervous or mental some infirmity which paralyzed the will. it is s. case which seems to be on tho debatable border-land between ordinary diseases and the peculiar class " nominated demo- niacnl. "And when Jesus saw her Ho called her i0 Him." Bent over she was hidden in the crowd, but Jesus was protbetbly standing on a platform to teach, "Wloman thou art loosed from thine infirmity." This word is remarkable as not being. like most of the cures oi demoniacs, a command to the evil spirit to go forth, but an assur- ance to the sufferer, ill-tied oo in- spire her with hope. and to en- courage her to throw cifths alien tyranny. "And He laid d-lis hands on her." it was-not enough for our Lord to speak to her. He showed His loving sympathy by laying His hands on her. Thus His foll- owers are to come into touch with the sinful and needy and sad. "And immediately she was made straight." lt was a great uplifting. a type oi a-ll that God works in His human beings. The miracle ls thus Iheautl-ftrlly described -by the poet: The pent life rushes swift along Channels it used to know; And up. amidst the wondering throng. She rises firm and slow. George Maedonaid. “And the ruler of the synagogue". This official was the chief oi the elders, who formed the local San- hedrin. He would have the super- intendence of the service, and nation because that rather than break the holy day. Every one had stories of‘ grand fidelity to it. The Jewish ‘ed with death. to touch the helm ins. white thousands of Jews nan let themselves be butchered rafll. er than touch a weapon in gplf (l... fence on the Ssibbath. The relig. 'lf\1lS‘l'll-l6l‘s of u... 1s... m“ that the ‘new doctrine" oi Jesus would turn their world upside dgwn lg "l" illlilllfll- “And said unto the People". The ruler addressed his . W“! l0 "l8 P60i>1e but he intend- ed htis relbuke for Jesus. “Let them "lllefflfore come and be healed and got on the Sabbath day." Seven o: esus miracles were done on tlla "ll-WWI probably others described in general terms, To (m. tlnguish the Sslbbath as He did ‘by Willing upon it so many or m, miracles was to conssorate it to Why Rheumatism Often Comes Back The Usual Treatmhnt Does Not Roach the Root of the Trouble Most treatments for rheumatism do no more than aim to keep down ‘hi! ‘Poison in the blood and enable nature to overcome that particular attack. Then when rthe system be- comes run down them any cause the 4119089 Basin gets the upper hand and it all has to be done over. Sufferers from rtheulnattsm who have found their condition unreliev- ed or actually growing worse while A. MacDonald H. F. MoPhea using other remedies, would do well “- 3- g to try Dr. Williams’ tPlnlr Pills. The ilarrletere, Attorney, Ito. “my; nut-meat m"! u“, madmm, '- "WW 9° W!" has proved in thousands of cases llllvy lui that a builds , up the blood n. a point that enables-it to cast out the " rheumatic poisons through the rez- ular manuals of exertion. the bow- els,‘ kidneys and the skin. i When this is done rheumatism ls banish- ledmndosiougaalhebiooqls kept pure and rich s» patient will be immune from attack. This is proved by the case of fill-e. J. Hewitt. Beach. P. -O., i-ianrtlton. 0nt.. who says: “llbr a number oi year! l was troubled with milecular rheu- matism. which caused me s are“ deal of suffering. l ‘would 80! "d of the trouble for a time. but it al- waye came back. A friend recoil!- mended Dr. Wfltlann Pink Pills llll ll have not bald an attack of rheu- matism since ~i took them. and thll is five years ago. i have since used the ville for anaemia and found them will! 800d. and i now re- commend t ern to all! friends who “l. ‘F’ m” N t these nails kmn any VI You can ge mediums dealer of U? mil at 5° canto s box or sia bones for "-59- s... slid?’ %""“*""“°"' lilo," ' _ would determine in each case who ' rtlculars of ‘Service Furnished‘ 3:15; lnec“gliaag’°lgrtgowillgivél: an address. "Answeized with indig- Jesus had ‘heeded on the Sabbath." it was the Ihoast that Jews were known over the world for their resdines to die sailor had rerused. even when thréatsn. a moment after the sun had set 0n “Fully. though a storm was rag- Ra-isins ' A lnTins . sins with l/IIJFI-Ihllll o‘. Iruli [mil-all rca y for a ca c. Plump, tender, thin-skinned, juicy morsels with all seeds re- moved. _ You have never tried s more delicious fruit. I jrwt. sizes: 8-oz. tins and 12-oz.t1'ns. At your dealers. Sun-Maid A Raisins in Tins the purposes of His Gospel and to a.“ tkingldom. "Doth not each one of or hl-s ass from the stall." The Talmud has minute rules itor lead- ing out snimalson th-e Sabbath. An ass may go out with his pack saddle i-f it was tied on before the Sabbath, but not with a ‘bell or yoke; a. camel may go out with a halter; a string of camels may be led if the driver takes all til! hai-ters in his hand and, does not twist them, ‘but they must opt be tied togeher. ec. “And lead him away to watering." The rallibis. while permitting attention to beasts on the Bwbbath did so grudgingly. 1t was permitted to draiw water for the beast. that the animal might approach and drink. but the water must not -be carried to the beast and set down before it. “And ought not this woman be- ing a daughter of Abraham." A Jew, with whose sorrows, the Jewish leaders should have had sympathy; a Jew—-and not s beast. “Whom Satan hath bound." This may imply. as some think. that Jesus traced, her infirmity to sin. Our Lord, however. does not speak of her sin; and great sin- ners do not frequent the house of God. Satan may therefore be said to have bound this daughter of faith in some such sense in which he is said to have inflicted boils on Job or in which St. Paul des- cnibes his "thorn in the flesh" as a messenge or tSatan, sent to buf- fet him. (ll. Oor. Jill. 7.) “Be loos- ed from this bond on the Sabbath |Ksep ma as the apple of the eye; it into the spirit of ‘l-lisl you on the Sabbath loose his oxlLord. to receive glory and 110110111‘ QFOI Till WIIK- IIILI THOUGHTI Illl ll lull “ff-K's: ‘m3 YOIII JANUARY 7_ MiiZPAl-lz-The Lord watch be- tween me and thee, when we are gilsent one from anothen-Genesis :49. JANUARY I M-Y MRONG HABITATIOI-lz- Be thou my strong habitat/ion. whereuntol may continually re- sort: thou hast given command- ment to save me; tfor thou art my rock and my fortress-Psalm 71:3. ' JANUARY l THE ABPIJE OF ‘HHE EYtE:-—- hide me under the shadow of tliY Wlllfilw-"Plll-Ill 17:8. JANUARY 10 GLORY AND HONOUR AN-D P0W7ERZ—Tll0ll art worthy. O and power: for thou hast created all things. and for thy illeflfillfe they are and were crested-Rev- elation 4:11. JANUARY 11 l-lUtMithiTYz-The sacrifices oi God are a broken spirit: a broken and a contrite heart. 0 God. U10“ wilt not deflPlW-Qfialm 51:17- JANUAFIY 12 HEAVDNLY mkmflUklilSz-LBY up for yourselves treasures in hea- you, where neither moth nor rust doth corrupt. and where thievee‘ a not break through and Sl-BQL- a thew 6:20. JANUARY 15 POWER AND MAJESTY!’- Biess the lord. 0 my soul. like‘: my God. thou art verY 8'95 v i” art clothed with honor and m, esty. ‘ i0??? CHlRIST-MAQ ELI) CONCERT AND TREE AT BROOKFI on the evening of Tuesday Dec- chrlstmas Tree WM h?“ h Qrgnge hall Brockiield. Alflloul the night was cold dill“! B large number were PYB-"lilm- Re" R“ day." Who-t is the da loosing‘! On this day worlssdsy world the tpresslng necessity of making a li-vting that it may take thought concerning the waster interest of making a life. “All His adversar- ies wero ashamed." The plural here is evidence that the ruler of the svnssosue was not. alone in h-ls reproof, “And all the people re- loiced for all the gIOflOu-s things that were done lby Hlm." The les- s"! Wish-t here is that Christiani- ty is a very merciful, a vol-y com. passionate, a very human religion, _as Judaism was meant to have liheen. and that the Saibbath is an invitation to humanity and sn op- lportunity for its exercise. Latest Inventioss And Improvements (tClntlnued from Page 9) ion in which every aspect of the problem is very cleaiuy discussed. Suggestions sremads for the ven- tilation of the celbins of aeroplanes nly of fresh air without acute draughts. Experiments are being carried out In the heating of sero- plane cabins by means of a high pressure boiler fitted to the ex- haust pipe. A careful illosssnch has been begun into the various ways cf diminishing noise and vibration. With regard to air sick- ness this seems to the due partly to what the Air Council kindly calls "s certain amount of apps-g. hension." Certain drugs are sug- gested as preventivea. but the real cure is claimed to lie in the im- provement of travelling conditions. Direct Electric Llphtlng of Motor Gare ‘ film benefits oil electric lithi- ing on motor can are obtain“ at the expense of putting up with the drawbacks of accumulators. inventors in Great Britain have therefore been stimulated to ex- amine the possibilities of lllpfly. ing electric light on a car with-out the use of-any form :0! storage ibatterv, and chem! lhein haesue- needed in doelvniqg a ngyfig of generator loll‘ senns toll: ' all the conditions required. It‘ i very lisht. weirhing only stxt. bounds: and it is suspended mm the ohassls by l simple bunk“ The zenerator is ddven-rrom- g pulley on the engine pbaft, and l“. side this pulley is.a special clutch which ensures-that the lass-m. will not run above-a certatnspasd no matter how . fast, the engine runs. ‘rests made on n gum omnlboass show that tho mggllul tern operates quite successfully. sunndylna a steady illumination as ions as the eilaine ta running. Fe only drawback is. of coin-so, at no light will be available when the engine is not musing; but any practical disadvantage which bright arise from this source is stated to be cornpooeatld for‘ by the saving of battery and ¢1|qf m. uewaia. The inventor ciainI, fl fact. that many hundreds of s will be saved aalmlly 0a a so as to provide sn adequate eup- 1o slavert occupied the chair and PERIA u, .. .._,. t. TOBACCO COMPANYor CANADA. tmrrtao. . V,» -> t: . y for but forums ‘allow-m; pfogfllm was well the whlflelrendered: . l is loosed froml l-Ihmus .._ Merl-y, Merry Christ-l mas; Choir. - l Address — Chairman. R“- R- Stavert. ’ -Recitation_—~ Sheldon 1.10m and t1‘, Sherman M01311" Solo — Christmas Gifts. 0W“ tOlirtls. I Duet ' Alice and Laura tMcRae. l Recitation - a Xmas Di Clarence Dollar- '_ The Glad Xmas Mum-i lemmai l l lReoitation —— To Santa Claus.- {John ‘Matheeon. l ' Exercise — Xmas over all theg Land, our girls; 301W —- Kllfll Sing, lSlng oi Xmas, Margaret Mc- Lean; (lhorus -— Carol Sweetly Carol, Choir. Monologue —— Some- body's Picture, Helen Stewart. Recitation — All He Wants. Rus- sell Smith. Duet — Loves Old Sweet Song. Alice hicltae and Olga Ways. (encore). Recitation- 'i‘he Quest of the King, Lottie Johnston. Monologue - A Bureau of Xmas Information. Nellie Mc- Duff. Violin Solo ~ Mr. McDonald. (encore) Mr. McDonald. Lullaby Song -— Mary Lois Bell. Recitat- ion — The Real Question. Laura McRae. Recitation —- Waiting ror the 26th, Golden Dollar. Violin So — Mr. Donald McDonald, (en- core). Song — Mr. Gordon Mc- Leod, (encore). instrumental mu- sic — Mary Lois Bell. (encore). Chorus ~ We Three Kings of the Orient, Choir. During the program a short rc- cese was token and quite a large number of lhoxes of candy were sold. Just as the program closed. hell's were heard sounding out on Wotan SUFFEBEIJ inn Mounts Weak and Nervous. Made Well by Lydia EPiI-rkham’: Vegetable Compound Webbwood,0nt.-" l was in a very weak and run-down nervous condition. Song — Silent Night. Flour, girls] Kringle, five gii-liuRe-citatiorl ~- HATs-iuiotrrlcs ANDTETR; so often had an important rile-H ION. iin (hstinguishlng sects.‘ The Pu- ritan wore his severe lugll 'il'"wll' the evening ztir and it was notltts also were Mr. .Wil'bert C. Drum‘ long before Santa Claus made hisimonti, the organist and Mr Chas. h “V H - I l d head a. appearance ln the hall. After hay-IE. McDuflf, the Sunday St-huol su- The "Huts and (alts _wsre ed hnt over h sh croppgener o! the ing told of his trying experiences perintendent. Quite n snug sum [he "Mug, 01 twQ rlvul parties mIn rebuke to ‘ t ecav on his way from North Pole. Hqwas realized and this will ‘be de- swedisll politics during "the 1v8th time, with his hair llllurglérlga flail!!!‘ distributed s large number of giftsvélteg t?) young gltlglilesdzxviwlki century“ the ‘Hill's €Pniefiegtizilihii gfeflrlwfirlltzelillglg Thlle Quaker a‘ , . . Fliilllldll rest .1 a t - “in s" e l; 0w c ' - - - ' gglltfilsnstbvevdcll"lggzgntgnghéhgegforfl:lorgan. The gathering was brouglrtlllllli. 2:“? oimthe ‘gonunopn people. recto-d a broad brlmmed gray hat. pastor was very kindly and gener- to a close bv the singing nl the ‘The names were the slogans in which he refused to dofi to all)’ ousty remembered by Santa Claus National Anthem. some bitter thatties. Huts have sl- mun-only t0 his Maker- a The High Court of Public A Opinion ORTHY good-s are the only ones that can success- fully stand trial at the High‘C0urt of Public Opin- ion. All others are quickly‘ condemned tand sentenced to oblivion. The manufacturer who advertises, deliberately places his merchandise 0n trial. He invites your critical inspec- tion. He makes publicly certain claims, on the fulfill- If he were not sure of his goods he would not dare to adver- ment of which depends his commercial success. tise. For tadvertising would put him to a test he could not meet, and thus hasten the end of his business career. always tired from the time I got up until l wont to bod. Sleep did not rest Ine at all.’ lg aiater recommended Lydia E. Pink am a Vs table Com- . unlit» me and others ld rne about .but it. was from m sister's advice that Itook it. it d d not take ion Until I felt siren r, headaches le t Ila and my appet to came back to mo. l am a farmer's wife and have man th todo outaide the house, suc as rn llrlng, looking after the poullfl- and other chore» 1 heartily recom- mend the Vegetable Com d to all who have the aaane trou I had, for ‘i. " i?‘ Two...‘ s.‘°'.."il“.fi2;..'. ra- Uie - Farm. Webbwood, Ont. M‘ 0i Aastisrlluvanwenaaiiadslleial Huron llioh-"infferedfor 5 of bums Qfilllllid all velrtlon, - 1Q Advertiing protect-s you against fraud and inferiority. It saves you money by pointing out for your considera- ‘lllll Well-informed buyers seek news of good merchandise in tion only the best products. the advertising columns and are guided by the messages they find there. Read the advertisements.’