lf 5 ` t l I li. 'Q > 6. r If' - '!‘ ia J 4 i F F r `» __._pgi,r_ggi-, v I lt li: , . » W\ n. miuusuun, un -. & . ’ Physician and Surgeon. S 'ji _ A city Bending. _ A . -..- si- . ‘L fs ., 1. »¢-` * .H » ,.1 __ _». rv i ~- ,. ~.»”~§_,,_ -‘;\)'~_'.?'._ - - _-si.; _,. _,__.. _._v,;._ L __ »» , .fn , » -v...~.=» . -~ ._ ei. ~. ~. ' ~ ~ 3-°r'»' - »~.€»'-»'~"~\‘..g -491.4. -s.».e-».»....¢. ui... .9-...,-~w»..» »»~ _ _.Lx 6 'run GUARDIAN, oHARLo'rT1iTowN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND. MAY 16,1901. in _._ -f ' " ° Y _'__ -I -_ _ ¢ ` mfs varieties. Goodyear \Velt shoes, with Sleeper insole. There arc two kinds of shoes, Goodyear Welt, and all other In a Goodyear Welt there are ` two kinds of Insoles ; one is Leather, and tlie other is a Sleeper Patent Fkfxlble I°S°l¢~ There is only one shoe that represents a perpetual comfort, whereby a shoe takes the place of a slipper in the house, or a. boot on the street -this is the Good ear Welt that is made with the Sleeper Insole. The, Sleeper Eatent Flexible Insole, which is made from 15-ounce Duck, is soft and pliable, perfectly waterproof, and shapes itself to the foot in such a manner as to afford the greatest possible cpmfort. The Sleeper Insole will not harden with perspiration, as leather insoles do, and is always ready for immediate wear. The J. D. King Co., Limited, have the exclusive rightlfcr Canada. Alley 61 C0..Agen*s at Ch’towr\ 1" 'i F' " 5 \\ rel v ‘ ""“`~ I mmm ) -.’ff‘-’-'~=1~..»-. warm f /' 'I' If/'§»2}., ' \ 0 I Q / \ I if ._;_'_»f:¢,§,"‘,,‘;p-\W, ' NOWS A GOOD THING `. ./’ WHEN HE SEES TQ “_”-I ' "°@`f""` "Pt The|°e’s More to thePedals Than the I Looks. fitted wiih the best pedals, perfect in ,; every essent'al point for comfort and and safety-worthy of the high grade' machine that it is -several optiois in styles. in other words looks isn’t eversthing., 3 1*' Tue Brantford -‘Red Bird” for 1900 is, ~; . l 9 “D ,imp ‘i L/® il ei V il lun: lv MONTREAL, i BABY S CWN SOAP il-il-_ THI ALBERT TOILET SOAP CO l Insane or 'ri-il ezuznnrrze ` ALBERT TOILET SOAPS. 4. »u»ssv»»-v44444xsx»x-vnu It ¥¥¥U~4~¥¥4¥¥4¥¥¥4l¥44 U C ¥¥¥44 V I i l' l I - i J in all bicycles is the bearings. Gen- dron Bearings are dust proof and made p no they will run for years without show- * Omce Hours-9 to io;i2 to 2; 7 to 8. TELEPHONE 323. omcs .ma Rssinsucs-K... si., Nei ing signs of wear. 1 iiixmiiie inns, SYDNEY. Charlottetown. C. B. ADVERTISEMENTS 3-161|. _ ' gin- _ ~ BARRISTER. &c O .l , BURNS' CQRNER. ` Charlotte Street, Sydney, C. B. \ l I ` May 6 daw _ ,F. A. G. OUSELEY. J _ DENTI ST . ¢>I'I'IOE- Su:nn.yl1de, New Prowse Block. First door to the righ; up stairs. - Satisfactory work. Reasonable price. Telephone zro. l|.Ll||`l. MBBUUHALU, L. L. B. Barrister, &c. SYDNEY, CAPE BRET ON, N. S. Branch Office, Glace Bay. 6. B, Collections promptly attended to Nov 19 d8cw 3 mos. f; . _Ti m WANTS. LUSTS. FOUND,_ ETC FOR SALE-A second-_hand Jump Seat Buggy Appllyxat once to Mclnnis Bros , Kent Street, Char tetown. utf d & w. STERNS RACER FOR SALE-1899 Sterns Race fo S le lo bl _k 8 ...J F2. “f...T§2’. §...ti‘».f..iI.€°“§.’,.;i§“§1’°.i.‘l’Zl NORTH SYDNEY. C- B- .Eee. ri rw. Nov Z) 3 mos d&:w Joseph McDonald LL,B J BARRISTER AND SOLICITOR. COLLECTIONS PROM!-"l`l.Y ATTENDED T0 5 id WANTED.-A first-class pressman tailor ' ‘wages no object. Apply here. __ r4.iw°\ I B TO LET I-Trwo pleasant front rboms, with or ;i=1g°»5;1g°i;g°dc;;=n»=_t.i in e-....1 are ef we Shippers ul Dld Sydney and llsulnlo #fi ‘“‘“‘°”°m°“-...:.“.i;f“- 0 o A. I.. s Y - > _ - General Commission and Steamship =gY¢iiii.?i. i‘§.*5`§1¢.°§‘£.’§§f' ’§i§.f'i§° §§.‘i§i..§i issues- Ll°y"’s Agents and Agua fgr housemai . Apply at the P. E, I. Hospital 7tf New York, BOSUOII and Ph delphw _ Underwriters. BOY lVA}.fTED__F°r 5h¢¢ sto;-¢_ one with NORTH SYDNEY, CAPE BRETON. some experience preferred. Address Box 71 ‘N0vmd&W6m08 ¢1tY{ .itl A ~_ , A __ - Q _f ;j T0 LET,-That conveniently situated house onthe corner_of Pownal and Water street 'at griesint occupied by Mr Hewitt, Bas all mod- mproyements. Possession given the fi st e ~ of May. l 26 r f r Barrlslsrs, Solicitors, Conveyancsrs lic. 'ro LET.-Two iieyv <1weiiing_h.,,,S'¢s 9,, Sydney Ompe Breton. Hillsboro St. near Hillsboro Square, These bonses_ ire both new and first-class in every Solicitors for the Banko! British North isrticntlai' and have all modern conveniences. America, Sydney 1>i> y o W. w. weiimr. .ei f Iaeterregebr ji. nina; Memes Musee; *" U' ¢_i; . _ eQun e, Summerside. _ sppgygglavelléggs guswg ' Honey to Loan, Real .estate bought and sold _.-Q, all modern conveniences. Apply gg W W HUGH Ross LL' B* W 26 , f' ' _ nowARn s. Ross B. A. nun. '“ WANTED;-A Hfmsekeeper for th 'W 1 I ' are as :niacin & icuii ¥¢W=0n. clmriouetown. QFAWIY u2)3il°hn I " ` ' ' " .rf_ _,_‘~ .' . _ . - _ V TOLBT,-Thstdeiirable l¢i'i'§§'l'|:e_.'pnG|-gftgqgg, :Y ‘ ` l =.~....'-=. .:.~."°~==.. ...;::.f:~.:..i:=:.»-.c,-..if...='~'..= ~~°w==e 'lm as 'llf&IlW11l!ld[1rd¢n Hgusggnea with ali HBCDOBIIIYI Bl0¢k, Cflltldt S1 . ,_ _ . Y . Q couven1enoe»audhea°t.ed&v`i;l;.:i`o¢ Xorg;-,~ syn,” Q” Bnhl, N s_ _gym g . _ i '~,,,f"3"»swioAw\3um m.;ponnLncrroN me » I~':_£`l- ;..lIl'..» PniSlf§_»4~ d§P“_'-‘-- an - “is - - -"- ' “AY 11;'-'-" ”’ A°"°"` "‘ _"°L _-‘_z" 1” *.77* _ I y 1_the=1l:r-st Monday, of each month. Ewen r -stewart. secretary. . _ _ it 1 cominend Stuai'_t’s " Tablets, be-i The Development Theory declare themselves. Only such as know not the scope and limits of Science can fall into so grave an error. The foregoing geiieralizntions apply,not to the genesis of things in themselves, but to their genesis as manifested to the human cou- sciousness. After all that has been said, the ultimate mystery remains just as it was. The explanation of that which is explicable, does but bring out into greater clearness the inexplicableness of that which remains behind. However we much succeed in reducing the equation to its! lowest terms, we are not thereby enabled to determine tlie` unknown quantity; on the contrary, it only becomes more manifest that the unknown quantity can never be found. Little as it seems to do so, fearless en quiry tends continually to give a firmer basis to all true religion. The timid Sectsrian, alarmed at the progress of knowledge obliged to abandon one by one the' superstitious of his ancestors, and daily finding his cherished belief more and more shaken. secretly fears that all things may some day be explained; and has a corresponding dread of Science; thus evincing the profoundest of all in- fidelity-the fear lest the truth be bad. On the other hand, the sincere msn of Science, contenttofollow wherever the evidence leads him, becomes by each new enquiry more profoundly convinced that the universe is an insoluble problem. Alike in the externalfand internal worlds, he sees himself in the midst of perpetual changes, of which he can discern neither the beginning nor the end - if,traciusz back tothe evolution of things,he allowshimself to entertain the hypothesesthat all matter once existed in a. diffused form, he finds it utterly impossible to conceive how this came to be so;aud equally, if he speculates on the future-,he -can assign no limit to the grand succession of phenomena ever un- folding -themselves before him. On the other hand if he looks inward, he per- ceives that both terminations of the thread of consciousness are beyond his I grasp; he cannot remember when or how ` consciousness commenced, and he can not examine the consciousness that at any moment exists; for only a state of consciousness that ls already past can be- come an object of thought, and never one that is passing.- When, again, he turns from the suc- cession of phenomena, external or in- ternal, to their essential nature, he is equally at fault. Though he may succeed, is resolving all properties of objects into manifestations of force, he is not thereby enabled to realize what force is; but finds on the contrary, the more he thinks about it the more he is ballled. Similarly, though analysis of mental -actions may finally bring him down to sensations as to the original materials out- of which all thought is woven, he is none the for- warder; for he cannot in the least com~ prehend sensation-cannot even conceive- how sensation is possible. Inward and outward things he thus discovers to be alike inscrutable in their ultimate genesis and nature. 'He sees that the materiallst and spiritualist controversy is n more war of words;the disputants being equally absurd-each believing he understands that which it is' impossible for any msn to understand. In all directions his ,in- vestigations bring him face to face with the unknowable and he ever more clearly preceives it to be the unknowable. He leaves at once the greatness and little- ness of human intellect-it’s power in dealing with all that comes within the range of experience, its importance in dealing with all thattranscends experience He feels, with a vividness which no others san, the utter incomprehensibleness of the simplest fact, considered 'in itself. He alone truly sees that absolute know- ledge is impossible. He alone know» that under all things there lies an im- penetrablqmystery. -"""'»§"l' '° 3="'?4’ :F 4* ~1' »’.:"_!.‘f¢;“ I it $011,!! G 0172 f 0?' li ---- ' 6 M ‘ Ml" ` HERBERT Si>s.vc"R. gf-.»"{»ff“=’€l‘5,‘ "“ 3 £’~.T-~ .'f_‘°¥"--, f S}l08$. ° I gi li* ali’ 'C _ Probably note. few here conclude that ,Wyse »_f¢_,- g_,1,'\,.1rf;‘i" ll If-I 1 2.2. ifg-. »,-,,~,~' ._ if .'-~ 4-- -|_._,{ 1-»_._‘ ‘1,-` f_I>_»;,| i-_ _ 2;.-“ _H-Sf; _V _.. ».._1_,~‘ ." we :flier _ 'i§+»:T\l'. .~§;*4,_¢,~..,.'\'_f..