HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1914-11-26, Page 7laesouX1. November 29, 1914.
Chriet lao 21-24.;
ieike all. 39-19,
rent went it ry.--1. mus aimed on the
ernes t 21-ei.) 21. It is the oast=
iq require the cz to be Cru-
cified to tarry tiw orees on which he
•
wee te ratiter, or, lettit, a part tt
lu•th. iit ti Rots vac -
nee 1U. 1 veil way aim ellen
-siteligtli ILL.eeinen, man t( .I
layreateinAfricia wes eciapeueo
titO •.01t11as to cam it or him. 2:$.•
;.lolgetitue Tee lecitip ,u- et Golgotha le
notderillitely anima aoine Kean.. a
to the male of Jerteialtan won a ilea
that 1 Cere a reeemakince to ektol,
and this N peobably the piece. 23,
Wine mingled with in,),rrh---in 111,t1.•
thew It L spiiken of ae. vinegar mixed
with gall. It was a •tupetyma mix-
ture, said to have been pmvieteet by the
Indies or Jerusalem to tleutlen the pain
of those about to be cructlied. Ite re-
ceived 11 not -lie tasted it and then
rofused to drink it (Matt. 27:34). Al -
Gimlet it was offered In kindness,
1einiWettld not drink it, because 11
wiebed ail -hie senses to be active while
ite was uudergoing• his sufferings for
the sins of the world. 24. crucified
Itim-Crufixion was a Roman mode oi
lalniehtuent, and only the vilest crime
Mete mere thus executed. The vic-
timwas fastened to the eroesby spike
driven through the hands and the feet
hito tbe e cod. This was dono before
the trues was raisNi taut fixed in the.
grelirel Tho pain woe; exam -heating
awl death ueually cume alowly. Part-.
ed hie veep -lite -Tito execatinnere
were entitled to the outer garments ta:
the victim, Ana in this age, as .1mits'
robe was without seam, lets were east
to determine to whom it should be
given. 25. Ultra hour --Nine o'clock.
..M, ernereeriptien ct his aceneation-
The emcee of oinee execution vele us-
ually written on a beard or tablet
anti carried at tal heee of thea Peoees-
stop, as it novel toward the place of
execatioa, or was euepended from the
neck of the arisoner. After he was
crucified, it acts nailed to the cross
abase his bead. Tae King of the
Jewe-eln elite ease the charge WaS that
et treason, but the accueation was
written half in mockery. Pilate had ie
thus evritten in three laaguages.
alehree .WaS the lang.mige of the com-
mon people, .Latin was the official
language and Greek watt the language
of the foreign population. Greek was
the language of culture; Latin;.of pow-
er; and Hebreiv, of religion 27. two
thieve:A.-It is more than probable that
they belonged to the bead of, Barabrats,
-Cam. Bib. 21.; numbered with tile
'''ielegessore-The referenee hero is to
fsa.. 52: 12. He was counted ameng
criminals, *although- he was innocent,
anti he wets numb.ned among trans-
grepsors, wham he came to redeem.
II. Jour, reviled; (vs. 29-32). 29. Rail-
ed on Him -Insulted Him. They show-
ed no pity and had no sympathy for
Him, Wagging their heads -Moving
their heads in scorn. Their words and
gestures expressed their exultation
over a fallen enemy, for tbey believed
that He was permanently. defeated
and -destroyed, Ah -An exclamation of
derision. Thou that destroyest the
temple, etc -The People took up the
false eliarge that was presented
against Him at the trial before the
council. They did not understand that
He uttered a prophecy of His death
and resurrection when He spoke at
Hesfirst cleansing of the temple
about His dc.stroying the temple and.
building it againthree days. 30. Come
down from the cross -In their derisive
outbursts the people intimated that He
had .declared that He had great pow-
er, yet He could not come down. from
the cross. If He had left the cross, He
would have failed to accompliele tho
great end for which Ile came to earth.
31. Chief priests mocking -Those high
In authority and dignity placed them-
selves upon a level with the mob in
their derision of Jesus. They believed
'eir triumph was. complete. He need
others -This was said in mockery, yet
it was a great truth. He had spent
His earthly ministry in saving the
bodies and souls of men. Himself He
Cannot save -If He had saved himself
Heat:end not have saved others. He did
not come to earth to save Himself, but
to lose His life that He might save the
world. 2. That we meet see and be-
lieve if He should come down from the
erose, They refused to believe even af-
ter He arose frem the dead.
III. The thieves on the eross (Luke
23. 39-43). At first both thieves reviled
Jesus, but one ceased, while the other
went on almost, if not quite, to the
paint of blasphemy, The former in re-
buking the tatter acknowledged his
guilt. He became conscious that He
Wlee hung on the cross beside him
wag the Christ and was able to help
him, In reply to his .humble regnest
ta. be remembered when. he :should
genie in His kingdem, he heard. the -
gracious words, "To -day shalt thoh be
with Me in paradise? Thus .-even from •
the tree MS Lord began '10 reign, and'
vlien lifted up to draw men, even. as
Ie Jiad.said, unto Himself (John 12. •
32).' Th.% ,N one instance. of the sal-
.-eation of a soul when jug abotit • to
o into eteraity, enough to give hope
e6thers who seek Goa when death
lit view, butit is poor eneeerage-
'tent to men and women to put off
their,eoul's salvation until the hour ef
Oahe -
IV... jeene gave up His It•fe (is. 33-
.. ..
.41) 33e The sixth hour -Noon. Tire
-
reckoning was !rein sunrise; darkness
-Tine la One of the mysterk;s attend-
ing our Lord's miseion and can °MY
be .explained by attributing the dark -
'less directlyto divine agency. It
was the time .of the Passover full
moon and therefore tould not have.
been an eclipse or the SUM Again,
an eclipse of the tun lasts only a few
minutes, but this Whiles); catinued
three hour. The darrcneas was terne
leal at the night ef elm that Jena
mine to dispel and c•f the etutferings :
e'ealeat lie eadured for our redemption, -
34. The ninth houre-Thren .eeelock, -
Jesus tried with a Ioud vole:a-From
the tine of the lemming saerifice until
tile time .of the evening vaerifee Jens
suffered the agcny et the emits with
no Murmur (weeping 11N lips. In
thia hour, as 'He was about to. givenn
Ills life, Ha .001a mien tbe leather.
eIot, tame eaboalitbani --- 'These
word.; are a quotatien from Psa. 22;1
in the Hebrew Nei -Maga Mark re-
cord,' flita enly, the fearth. of the
eayinge; f Christ on the erosse
•The firat lltlr,"Father. forgive therna
for thy now netwhat thev do"
Mike 23;34). The second, "To-daer
ehalt then be with Me in earadime".
(Luke 23; 43). The tlitM, `Vona%
behold thv Sett" and, "Behold thc
other" (Min 211. 27). The fifth,
'thirst" aloha lateael. The sixth, "It
finished" (John ‘141:4614 The,sev-
Mitth. "Father. intO Thy handa -I eorn-
iiikeirid my Spirit" fLnke 23;461. The
I first three have references to others,
I the next three to His awfal rennin
w:th tha leeit lie ecunnenda Ills
tr till Father. 35. He ealleth
EPas l'.1nieratanding Iris words,
ho wag .eaVing for El -
!Jim to (1:Ink-Jesus,
boil 1,0'd "1 thieet," and fame of the
efel when inleed with water. the.,cont-
- ' '"IZ f Renate eoldiers, was
fieecd to Wm. Let alone - Mat-
*Itee wo. tle eee. he rest .said, Let
be, lee n; eee whether Vitae will -come
to. Wro." e7.-Jetille cried with a
wee. reaele-ef h aecounts of Matthew,
Mark 011(1 1 tate nOto the loudness of
icerie d en crY. Ins ehelgeal
streveth ere peel arm. Ile cloeed
His Pre n coneuerer. Gave np the
el:sea-Cave unhis life, He had
'pad "I le- dern My ine.--No man
ta it ele but 1 Ins it down
of alveclf" facile lin 17. 18),
oc-;-*.r - Where waa Christ
eauela tl? Who tarried Ms (Tess to
the. pinee rf eeceuticn? At what
hour waa (lhe'st .creelled? What
saying ef Christ en the cross .deee
Mark 'wad? What were HN other
eayinga? Want classee cf persons
were preeent at the .cross?. What in-
scriplia '.'ns r'acell over Jesus? Why'
wee; it written in different languages?
How long did the earhness continue?
What tock place ie the temple when
Christ gave un His life?
PRACTICAL SURVEY.
Topica-ahhe leapreme Event.
1. alosed Certsts earthly ministry,
11, Provided atonement for human-
ity.
1. Closed Christ's earthly military.
When Jezue was led to Golgotha, he
luta' stood at the focal point of a einfill
world's best light and; tual beeu pro-
nouneed worthy of death. Tao power
Rome was joined with jewieli fan-
atic:hen ztnti malice. The woriths sin
culminated in the rejection of the
world'e leavionc, "They crucified him
there," is the brief notification oe the
mist stupendcus crime committed la
the history of mankind. A strange pic-
ture was presented on Mount Calvary.
There were the indifferent watch of
the soldiele, the jealous Wateh of his
enemies,. the anxious watch at the
women and the wondering, watch of
the angelic best. All .classes were in
an extraordinary manner brought into
contact with tao Redeemer dining lits
last sufferings.. All had an opportun-
ity of displaying the state of their
minds toward lam. The paesers-by
railed, the rulers derided, the soldiers
mc,citea and the thieves reviled. The
Jews gloried in hie agony. They
judge(' results by what they wonted
rather than by the declaredplan of
Cod. The aoldiers were uncOnacious
of the diameter of him who .wari sue-
fering there, Tbey were equally un-
conscious of the nature of - the
transaction in which they were con-
cerned. Little did they think that the
divine Nw nes, being magnified, that
the greatest apt at obedience to the
divine command- was being performed,
and that in -Christ all the ancient pre-
dictions of the Jewish prophets were
fulfilled. There was not, on the part
of the soldiers, 'my personal enmity
toward 3ceus. Still there werdeevident
marks of brutality and cruelty. Their
indignities and insults were founded
chiefly on his 'claim to royalty, .which
appeared absurd to them. As soldiers
they despised his meekness and gen-
tleness and non-resistance. These
actual murderers of Jesus wee not
the Most eriniiaal; perhaps the least
so. They •wee less .guilty than Pilate,
who pronounced the sentence of death,
and he less guilty than the people who
demanded hie death, and they less
guilty than the priests and raters who
designed it ana who instigated the
whole proceeding.
IL Provided -atonement for human-
ity. The nccessit'y which bound Jesus
to the cross was e spiritual one, In-
cluding free,willing submission. The
nature of His work, .the everlasting
purpose of the Father, His office as
Priest, Victim. and Redeemer, the•
glory aad honor ef God, the love that,
he bore to aumanity .were all included -
in that necessity. The one word which
describes the whole gospel plan of sal-
vation is substitution.' Christ suffered
in every vale' possible, in that He
might reveal the Father and that man
might be eedeemed. The darkness wee"
symbolical oE God'shorror of tin,
even When borne vicariously by the
Lamb .01 God, and a symbol of His
wrath which fell upon those Who had
slain His only begotten Son. The seem-
ing abandomnat of His sufferingeSon-
was the crowning manifestation of
God's wrath against slit, the last and
most appalling -ingredient of His
atoning , eufferings. He bore at that
Moment the wrath of Goa on account
of man's sin. The divine horror at that
moment is unfathomable by mortal
mind, Except on the great principle Of
an atenement all this is unaccountable.
Without this last trial the temptations.
of •Christ had not readied their fun.
It rendered Ills trIumphinore
Jesus was man's representative on .
Calvary. The value Which God places
upon a soul was measured by that
cry.. At that Moirleat the curse was
revoked, the deft), recalled and tho
gates of everlasting life opened to a
ruined world. The tending of the veil
threw opeu that hitherto- inaccessible,
plaee, the holy of holies. It 'Was a mit-
cle attesting the divinity of Christ.
It also signifiel the end of the age, the
cermonial dispensation and the re;
moval of all .distitietions between the
Jewish and Cattle nations, In the
eenturion's eonfeesia beganthe tri-
umphs of the kingdom of the. cross.
Never did reason .obtain
plate victory over prejudice. His con-
fession was as the first-fruitset the
eraelfixion.-T, R.' A.
NORTH SF k RAID'
Gentian ?kat Preparillg to Come
Out in Fan Face.
London, Nov. 22.--"Meeenges from
North Holland state that unusual ac-
tivity prevails At Emden," says it
despateh trent the Exeliange Tele-
graph Conipany's eareeeendent nt
Tile Hague. The message followat
"Fishermen who daily eruise near
the German writers say that the Ger-
man flet is preparing for decisive
nation in the North Sea. Prince Hen-
ry of Prussia, was at Eniden yester•
day for the inspection of the. torpsda
and subluarine craft."
Einden Is the southernmost German
port on the North Sea. It II at the.
ninth, of the Bens, and just aeross
that river from Dutch territory, Em-
den is about 300- miles 'almost -duo
east of GrireshY, on the east coast
of England.
4I
The Stags-Zona/1gs_ the Vital Issue,
The Truth About Germauy, and the
Vaterlivad, four German publitItaiont,
have been probildted frolin.thoe Gana.
dial Mails trstalor Ukok War IIIVIrateuiem
Ae t. .
' Fire 7,1111rO4aY afterripen deeteenei 1
the Arnerican 44(1 Britian pavilions of
the international Modera Cita EzP041,
tIrtevve,lat hiwayas. °"1"(1 at i4"31E4
0 F THE li , i
,E.gi
..thiresfilng the insarance Institate in
Dr, Eugene L. Flak' of New TOr1C,
TorontO, enIphasiZed tile value of ab-
stiaence from WOW in lessening
, Fr THE 0.0 death risks.
HORT ITEMS
TORONTO IVIARIcETS.
1.1k bT01,.:K.
tiNtois
11e4elpts wele very lareg„ mace eat.
mime 14.ortulig thew arrived cuis,
141.4nb.eacue, ;I:Z40ea4t10:3: 4,111t 411v" ""
CA'.1:144:-.1.ratte in Cattle %Vac 1 1W
amanita; tor Inc canner cows asto
wrilen tv ix° rectally iniught at steileY
prices. Lioott to. clUitee tattoo aere
ja, tact Wo ate not 0013 n luau oc
choice butcher cattle on sale. Vrices
Were about eteaoy with Net ThUraday'S
Choice butcher steers- .. $7 50 to 88 Du
Good -butcher steers .. 7 50 to 49
Meoluat Dutcher steci's .. 6 00 to 75
Conlinon butcher steers 0 00 to 6;.5
Choice butcher heifere.. - 7 u0 to 7 25
Conunon butcher helfere 0 50 te 6 75
Choice cOWs .• • . u N 6 75
Good cows 6 tly to
Dulls . .. 4 so to 6 75
e (5 to 4 55
Cannere .„ .
1170EDERS' ANiti '' ST,00117,16ittl-A laic
supply of stockers and feeders wore
sold at about steady valnes.
Choice steers . . $6 50 to 1075
'Kilt there were few of 'them.
Iviedium steers 00 to 0 25
Stin190111 9 1.4
MILKZIVa i.RW.S1;iiiiiVERS-aecelpts
of good quelity were small, selling at
$70 to $100 each; bulk sold at $75 to $90
each. megium cows $60 to $65 each.
CA.LvEs-A light delivery sold at un-
changed values.
Choice veal. $9.00 to $10; connnon to
good 84.59 to 28,00..
SHEEP AND LAMBS-Kecelpts were
very heavy and prices lower,
CS 'riles!) a.ita." .1.% . $52 5000 too $54 7050
Lambs, choice 'eeve's wethers, $7,50
to $7,75 and extra choice light iambs
$8.00. Heavy coarse lambs $0.75 to 57.25.
HOGS -Receipts were heavy, and prices
were 25e, per cwt. lower.
Selected, fed and watered 17.75 and 57.40
f o. b. ears. and 18.00 weighed off ears.
IIIDES, SHINS, wool., ETC..
BEEPHIDES-City Butcher Hides flat,
14 1-20 per pound. Country HiOes, tlat,
cured, 16c to 17c per pound. Part cured,
3,Se to 1.00 per pound.
CALFSKINS-CitY skips. green. flat,
16c. Country, cured, 170 to is A-44. ran
cured, 16 1-2e; according to condition and
take off. Deacons or Bob Calf $0e to
$1,20 each.
HoRSEHIDES-City take off, 51.50 to
$4.75. Country. take off No, 1, 14.00 to
$4.50. No, 2, $2.50 to $3.50.
SHEEPSKINS -City- Lambskins, Pelts,
or Shearlings, 70c to $1.2,5 each. Cauntry
Lambskins or Shearllngs reic to 81.10.
WOOL -Washed combing fleece (coarse)
28e to 20c. Washed' clothing fleece
(fine) 30e to 31e. Wased rdections,
(burry, chaffy, etc.) 23c to 24c. Un-
washed fleece combing (coarse) 19 to 20c.
Unwashed fleece clothing (fine) 21 to
23c..
TALLOW -City rendered solid in bar-
rels, 6 to 6 1-2c. No. 2 6 1-4 to 6c. Cake
No. 111 1-2 to 7e. No. 2 51-2to 60.
I-TORS10 HAIR -Farmer peddler stock
450 to 110c. -Hallatn's Weekly Market
Report. '
le_kRMERS' MARKET.
Eggs, new laid, dozen .. 50 50 $0 55
Batter, dairy .. ,. 0 28 0 32
Chickens, dressed ,lb,... 0 16 0 18
Ducics, dressed; lb * 0•15 0 19
Turkeys, dressed, lb. .. 0 18 0 26
Geese, dressed, lb.. .... 0 16 0 18
Potatoes, bag.. 0 70 0 75
Apples, Can, bbl.... ., 2 00 3 25
Pineapples, box.. , . .... 3 50 4 00
Grapes, easka, 0 20 0 26
Cabbage, dozen.. ,. 0 25 0 40
Cauliflower, dozen 0 50 0 75
Celery, dozen.. .. 0 25 0 40
Cranberries, bbl.... 6 00 7 00
Onions, 75 -lb. sack .. 1 10 1 20
Do., Spanish, crate 3 25 50
Sweet potatoes, hamper 1 35 3 50
• WHOLESALE MEATS.
Wbolesale houses are quoting as fol-
lows:
Beef, forequahers, ewt$10 50 $11 60
1)0., hindquarters .. 13 00 13 76
Carcasses, caoice.. 12. 00 13 00
1)0., medium 10 00 11 00
Do., common . 8 00. . 9 00
Veals, common, cwt13 00 13 50
Do„ prime.. .. 11 00 15 00
Mutton 8 00 el) 00
Do., light 00 12 00
Lambs, spring .. 14 00 15 00
Hogs, light 10 00 la 75
Do., heavy .. 9 25 9 75
SUGAR MARKET:
Sugars are steady; wholesale prices
as follows:
Per cwt.
Extra granulated, Redpath's $6 81
Do., 20 lb. bags.. .. 6 91
Do., St. Lawrence .. 6 81
Do., 20-1b. bags., 6 91
Extra S. G. Acadia 6 91
Dominion, in eacks .... 6 71
No. 1 ypilOW . , 6 41
Crr rti..a, MARKETS..
WINNIPEG GRAIN OPTIONS.
Wheat -Open, High. Low. Close.
Nov. .. 1974 1 19% 1 19% 1 19%
Dec. .. 1 17 , 1 17 1 16% 1 16%
May 1 22% 1 22% 1 22% 1 22%
Oats -
Nov. .. 0 56 0 56 0. 55% 0 55%
Dec. .. 0 55% 0 551/4 0 54% 0 54%
May .. 0 53 0 58 0 57% 0 57%
Norvi.ax,-. 1 29% 1 30% '1 29%- 1 301,4
Dec. 1 26 1' 27 1 26 1 26
May 1 32 1 32% ,1 32 1 321/e
MINNEAPOLIS GRAIN MARKET.
MINNEAPOLIS -What No. 1, hard,
$1.19 3-8; No. 1 leathern, $1.15 7-8 to
51.18 3-8;, No, 2 do., $1.12 3-8 to $1.16-
3-8; Dec, $1,14 1-4.
Corn -No. 3 yellow, 576 to 69 1-2c.
Oats- No. 3 white, 46 1-4c to 46-
3-40. ,
Flour -Fancy patents, 45.90; first
elears, $5; second clears, $4.
titan, $21.50.
DULUTH GRAIN MARKET.
Duluth -Wheat -No. 1 hard, $1.18-
3-8e No. 1 northern, $1,17 3-8; NO.
2 do., 51.14 3-8- Dee., $1.16 3-8.
-Trtn CHEESE MARKETS.
London -Seen factories offered 1,-
064 boxes, all colored; no sales. Bid-
ding, 14 to 14 1-2e. Market adjourned
until December 7th,
LIVE STOCK.
'Beeves $6 '85 $10 60
Texas steers ., 5 40' 9 00
CoWs and 'heifers .-. 3 70 9 30
Calves .. .. 8 50 11„50
Hogs, receipts 18,000; market strong.
Light 7 00 7- 60
Mixed .. ,. 7 25 7 75
Heavy . .. 7 10 7 70
Rough - 7 10 7 25
Pigs .. 4110 600
Bulk of sales .... 7 35 CO
.sloSwheep receipts, 11,000; market was
Native .. 4 40 10
Yearling's .. 0 35 7 60
Larnbs, native .. 50 9 10
BUFFALO LIVE' STOCK.
East Buffate, Despatelt--Cattle re-
ceipts 2,400 head; chiefly Canadian, fairly
active and steyy; thipping 58.50 le 0.00:
butchers t $8.40; heifers 50.00 to 58.00;
ohs $3.76 to, .25* stockers and Jaspers
10.00 to e7,50; titoek.aelfere $5.00 te alae.
Veal receipts BO head; active; 6.00, tn.
$ .70.
Hoge 800, ttetive; good; hicluding heavy
VOrkers &lid pigs; $8.80 te $8.75;roughse7.25
to 87.3e; stags Stec to 58.50.
ShetO and iambs, receints 1,000 head;
active; lanlbs *6.00 to 50.tit); wetherS tg.ti
to $6.75; ewes 56.00 to $4.01; culls, slwei,
OR $4.1)0.
MONTREAL MARKVITS.
Medium cattle Were quoted at from
le to 6 3.4c; ebramon, do to .fic; lean
Se to ti 34e, Sniall bulls, 3 1-2e to
4 l -Se, Calve% Se to 8 1-2c; them',
1-k to ic; lamb*, 7 1-4s to 7 2-4c;
li-41 to 8 1-2e.
Sixteen Bodies of Lake Storm
Viefims of Late Date
Recovered,
FATAL N. Y. FIRE
Revolutionary Plot, Implicating
Douala Members, Found
101 Russia,
Henry Berger, a Toronto laborer oat
of employment, shot himself aria died.
Over 55 per mit, aae men reelieea
by the ehareholdore et the York Lean
Savings Company. •
Mr, John H. lIousPer, secretary of
the 1)fassey-11=W Company, died end -
(10,11y of acute indigestion in Toronto.
Mr. 11. U. Stevens, AL P., of Van-
couver, blames Germane for sending
the cargo of Iliodue to Vancouver in
July.
Sixteen bodies have been recovered
from the wreck of three 'easels riCar
Grind ;navels, Mich., on Lakb Super -
r.
1t is stated by tho international
Niel(cl Company, of New Jersey, that
Iiitle, Canadian niskel ha a gond to Ger-
man y.
lion. Walter G. Mitcaell was elected
unopposed to succeea the late Hon. 13,
B. G. MacKenzie as Treasurer of Que-
bec Province,
Rose Coleman, aged 12, was instant-
ly killed when it 22 rifle in the halal
of hetaaevcateen-year-old brother was
discharged in tbeir 'mother's home at
Fort Eo.
The Dominion Government plans to
iniTease the number of troaps In train,
lug to fifty, thousand at °nigh and
when the seeond contingent sails, to
onlist 17,00 more immediately.
Lord leteliard- Planto.geuet
C. M. 0„ ham been appointed Comp-
troller of the Houselaold to the GOV-
eruor-General, in aucceasion to Major
IX.vers-Bulkeley, killed in action.
A violent sirocco has been blowing
a the Adriatic for the past three days
and many Austrian mines are again
adrift.
Tee :Marquis of Tavistock, the sot,
and heir of tho Duke of Bedtord, was
,married at St, George's, Haterver
Square, London, Eng., to Louisa Whit-
well, of Oxford.
Damage to the extent cf about 5100,-
000 wasdone by a fire which ravaged
a section of the husiness district of
Eyebrow, Sask. .
Charles M. Sehwab said that none of
the 0Iympic's passengers was pledged
to secrecy regarding the Audacious
Godfrey Isaacs, managing director of
the British Marconi Company, won a
damage suit instituted by a wealthy
Russian Pole.
Some 9,000 bags of appleS and sev-
eral tons of vegetables sent from rural
Ontario were distributed among To-
ronto's poor.
Colonel L. R. Carleton, D. S. 0.,
commandant of the Royal Military
College, has made an application to be
sent to the tenet.
The steamers Barth and Lackawan-
na are ashore off Bois Blanc, at the
Soo. The wrecking tug favorite has
gone to their assistance.
Commissioner and Mrs. Richards of
the Salvation Army, appointed to be
chiefs of that organizatiob. in Canada,
reached Vancouver from Australia.
'The London Morning Post's Rome
correspondent says the Austrian -Lloyd
steamer Metkovitch has struck -a mine
off the Dalmatian coast and foun-
dered.
The steamer Mary Sicken is on the
rocks at Grace Harbor, Mich The
tug, C. 0. Smith, has worked on her
all 'day, but has been linable to get her
off.
Frederick D. Mollenhauer, million-
aire 'sugar refiner, died suddenly Fri-
day at hie home in Brooklyn. He was
54 years of age. Heart disease was the
cause of death.
The German steaneer Sierra Cordoba
arrived at Buenos Ayres and debarked
theanuteengers and crew of the British
steamer La Correntina and the crew
of the British ship Union, supposed
sunk by the Karlsruhe.
*Thee, Kelly, employed by the Wal-
lacelnirg Sugar _Company, walked oft
the end of a bridge across the ilyden-
ham. River,. which was swung to let a
boat pass, and etas drowned,
Blake Weaver, a well-known ton-
dos, t., coin m eretal traveller, wee
committed for trial, charged with the
oodu-tien, under promise of marriage,
ef a young Sarnia girl. Weaver is a
marled men..
A revolutionara plet, in welch sev-
eral members of. the Houma are alleg-
ed to be implicated, has been discoVer-
ed by' Petrograd polleo, aceording 'tb
a eemi-official statement, and war-
rants have beea issued for eleven per -
0011S
While cent:ding tare in the Montrose
yards of the Michigan Central Mail -
read et Niagara Falls, Leon Hayden,
25 years of age, was so severely crash-,
ed that he died in the Goaeral lioept-
•tal it few limit' afterwards.
Eight 'means tiro dead, two others
tailly burned that the'' may
and serea niZ)re, including two
fire captains, were injured as the re -
milt of a fire et sttspielons origin,
which tarty. SMiday virtually 'destroy-
ed it five -storey beick tenenient houSe
en Vast 29th street, in New York,
Five alien prisoners acre killed ana
twelve othem. were seriously wouneed
in it riot Thareday at the detention
camp at Doughle, isle of Man The
riot was ptecipttated Whefi sonic of the
prisoners attempted to 'escape,
'The tendon Them has it special dee
epetch frem Bombay stating that
• Majer M. V, Atulersort Was aS9AeSlOitt-
Ed Ly o fitnatieal Sepay while he as
aupeeintending the entbarkation of rile
thine en laralay eel -ileitis; Net,
laour hien Were, drOwbed in Pitt Ri-
ver Saturday evening When returning
to Vancouver Itt art autorfiablie from
Jeqtt1t1ni, Where they had bean at -
meting a football Matt. They took
thr urorig road and tan beta the CO.
quitleurt ahiphaildiug yards' alert to
We the dm,
With feW more nights of freezing
weather, Steamers will have fe break
the ice in St. Mary's River to get
through the Soo. Not for years has the
lee formed SA fast.
Snowetorms prevented the C. P. R,
steamship adlesanahle, and the Allaa
liner Corinthian frenn. aentering on
the SI. Lawrence River Friday morn -
Ing, bound for Europe,
Adam Clark Anderson, of Toronto„
manufacturers' agent, Will apply to
Parliament neat session for diverce
from his wife, Evangeline Merlora An -
(tenon, of Chicago, Ill, on the usual
"W"hiliales. shingling a barn for Henry
Opfer, Alviu Kritzer, Listowel,. bit to
the ground, a distance of 30 feet, ye,
eeiCing a fracture of his right leg and
serious Injuries. His injury is not like-
ly to prove fatal.
Shortly after 6 o'cleck Friday night
the dwelling hOliSe owned and erm-
ined by Alex. Brown, on George Street,
Harriston, together with the • entire
contents, was consumed by fire, There
was no insurance.
The Canadian schooner Cheslie, from,
Pascagoula, Florida, with a cargo ot
1311111)er, went ashore near Havana ear-,
ey Friday morning. The waves are
beating over her, and she will probe)),
13, break up and be a total loss.
Shooting of an English. woman as a
spy in the barracks at Courtrai was re-
ported in a message received at Am-
astreeislawnii. inThtieie
wgoamrnainen tist lose saaidlirwl priest
'when captured by the Germans,
Fire Friday afternoon completely de-
stroyed the fine barns on the farm of
John C. Smart, a mile east of Spring -
ford. The season's crops were all de-
stroyed, The loss is partly covered by
minysustrearny.ce., The origin. of the fire is a
Margaret Moore, 14 years of age, a
cripple sence her third year, owing to
infaatile paralysis, on her way to
school•at Meaford, was run over by a
Grand Trunk train, Her right leg was
cut off below the knee and her left leg
badly mangled. She died two hours
later.
J. Richardson, a respected business
man, of Sault Ste. Marie, whose sud-
den departure early in October caused
much surprise, pleaded guilty to two
charges of eorgery and five counts of
misappropriation of funds, amounting
to more than $5,000.
• _ •
MET REVERSE
Austrians Advancing Into Servia
Were Repulsed.
London, Nov, 23. -The Times' spe-
cial correspondent at Gragujevatz
says: "After being permitted to ad-
vance into Servia unchecked, save by
sundry rearguard actions, the Aus-
trians yesterday made a determined
attempt to break through the Servian
line near Lazarevatz. .A. sharp en-
gagement of the Austrians.
"On the same day the enemy exe-
cuted a movement whieh probably
was undertaken with the object of
turning the Servian left flank. Pro -
ceding down the road front Valiev'o
towards Kecteritch, they met the Ser-
vian column and were routed. There
are no developments on the rest 'of
the front. Austrian movements are
censiderably handicapped by the wea-
ther, for snow is steadily falling. The
Servian troops have been kept ad-
vised of the reasons which .proMpted
the retirement to existing positions
and their morale is excellent."
AS A WARNING
Turkey Explained ihe Firing on
the Tennessee.
Washington, Nov. 22. -The explan-
ation of the Smyrna incident, as pre-
sented to IL S. -Ambassador IVIor-
ganthau in an official statement by
the Titrkish Minister of the interior,
was that warning shots had been fired
"towards" the launch of the cruiser
Tennessee to warn her not to enter
the mined harbor, whieh had been
officially closed to merchant ships and
warships alike. This statement was
followed by one from the Minister of
War, who requested that the Ameri-
can cruiser he withdrawn. Advices
to this effect were received here Yes-
terday.
GERMAN PRISONERS' PLANS.
London, Nov, 23. -The Manchester
Guardian, referring to the rioting
last Thursday in the alien detention
camp on. the Isle of Man, in which
five prisoners were killed and twelve
wounded, says this outbreak was due
not merely to discontent with the
„toed' and treatment given them, but
was part of a desperate plan of the
prisoners` to escape from the camp
with the ultimate hope of seizing a
vessel in the barber and making their
way to some neutral country,
GERMAN* BASE IN CHILE,
Lima, Peru, Nov, 23, -It is declared
here toglay on what would appear to
be good autherity that the Germans
have been, Maintainifig What Is des.
cribed as 0 initial station outside of
Valparaiso, Chile, Here they brought
together it ituntber of VeSeels, having
on board coal arid provielons. Chilean
papers reaching here say that the
Government Is deter-ined to sten
these breathes neetrality Veen at
the eoet of war,
OF L. FIZELtc-rED O1P1dElis
Philadelphia, Ndir. 22. -The Anteri-
Can Federation of Labor, t the final
eeesiOn saturclay Of Po thirty-fcierth
alieluttI Meeting te-eleeteti all its prq-
sent °Meet% and VOte'd to hold lit
next national et:invention at an
lereneleco in November, 191,
II, 4, Conway, 6f the Retail Clerks'
Union, was eleeted fraternal delegate
to the Canadian Trades Colon 'Con-
gress,
POLES REFUSE 'KAISER% OPPER.
Petrograd, Nov, 22. -The Heiser
offered to replace the golden crown
of the eelebtated *virgin of emanate-
thowa, Whit& Was stolen b7 the Ger-
pans, but the offer has been refused
by the Poles as "a, blasphemy o'cintlng
Vein iir0andfirier. liaii, violaters an41
lartrderers df Venters end dbladran."
GERMI1N DASH
NOT ,OCCElib
Assault On Russian Oentre in Pol-
and Held in Check;
Still righting, But Reinforcements
Aid Marls Troops,
London., Ilav. a -Fighting in the
great battle la Ressiall Plehtilal, 'ba-
bas been conceatrated into a front
'be-
tween the Vietula and the Warthe,
(icily 55 miles in extent, according to
latest reports from Petrograd, ...The
Germans have brought up six army
Corps, e auarter et a, million men, to
this line•and with extraordinary fury
are trying to shatter the RUSStall
froat between Lowiez and Saternle-
wice, only hefty miles from Wareaw,
On either side of these points the
Hanks of each army extend clear to
tee river banks -to the Vistula on
tee northeast and the Warthe on the
southeast, so that flank Attacks are
Out Of the question, The fighting cuweienecslisatrliiiey
sists ot straight frontal operations in
m-
ivaeses'yeahoefaVIV.th anal" aro
Itis.reported from Petrograd that
the Itussian concentration, whose de-
nte, due to bad reacts anct a lack of
railways, gave the German invaders
time to march almost two-thirds of,
the way from Thera to Warsaw, nee,
is colnplete, and •Russian 'unitary ob-
servers contend that the Gerinaus will
be able to advance no further. Noth-
ing definite is known of the strength
of the Ruseian torce between the Vis-,
tula and Warthe, except that it great-
ly outnuMbers the Germans, whose
Leaders admit frankly that their plans
depend, not on numerical superiority,
nut on their expectation of being able
to break through by mass formation
at some single point. According to
One estinate, there are 500,000 Ger-
man and 1,200,000 Russian soldiers
In the whole of Poland from ailiewa
to Cracow.
NO CLAIMS OF VICTORY.
It is admitted in Berlin that the
German armies in Poland have not
been able to break through the Rus-
sian defence. The German Govern-
ment makes not claim to victory, and
saie, in the latest statement, that the
issue has not been determined..
The freshest °Waal statement from
Petrograd claims little more, although
It was reported yesterday that tne
Germano had been driven back near
Lodz and that the German advance
has been- definitely checked. It seems
obvious to -day, thecefore, that the real
situation shoWs the imrnence forces
of Kaiser and Czar in a death grip all
the way from the Baltic Sea to the
passes of the Carpathians, with no vi-
tal advantage to either side. -
Official German reports show that
the Russians are well within East
Prussia, and are in far greater force
than was the case in the early part
of September; but the Russian ad-
vance in East Prussia has a long way
to go before the Danzig -Thorn line
Is really in danger or the railroad
aYstem affected. Moreover, the na-
ture of the country, which is marked
With sniall lakes and marshy plains,
as well as cut by numerous streams,
Is very favorable to the defenders. It
is recognized that the Russian ad-
vance can progress only if the in-
vaders are in greatly superior num-
bers.
However, the campaign in East
Prussia is really being decided on the
plains of Poland, as is the gampaign
In Galicia. Upon the outcome of the
battles now raging between the
Rivers Warthe and Vistula and be-
tween Czenstochowa and Cracow de-
pend whether or not Russia will be
able to maintain a hold on German
and Austria territory. Beaten in
Poland, Russia would have to with-
draw leer central army to the 'Vistula
for the defence of Warsaw and Ivan-
gorod, for a great hole would have
been torn in the now connected line.
Victorians in Poland, Russia would be
able to advance her central army once
more to the very border of Posen and
Silesia; perhaps to' overflow those pro-
vinces. At all events, her whole con-
nected line would have been straight-
ened and the advance) could begin
solidly from north, centre and south.
WAR LOANS ,
British Treasury Explains Aid to
Dominions.
London Cable, ---A Treasury min -
Ute lias been issued which makes
Clear the purpose for which advances
are to be made to the Dominion Gov-
ernments under the vote of credit
out of any war loans to be raised
by the GOvernment. Apprehension
existed among sotne members of Par-
liament that these advances might be
made use of for the purpose of finan-
cing State undertakifigs, for which
funds would net be obtainable on the
London market at ordinary rates.
Tile Treasury minnte sets out that
the Object of these advances is to
Drevide funds to 'Meet naval and Mili-
tary expenditure incurred by the do -
Minions and other charges directly
due to the crisis.
' They are not intended to bap -
plied to finaneiag development ser -
vides, It is further ekplairied that
the aunts advanced are to be applied
primarily to Meet the obligations of
%Await.** Alin.
1
0 GUARD AGAINST ALUM.
111 SAKINO POWDER SEE
THAT ALLAN OREDIENTS
ARE PLAINLY PRINTED ON
THE LABEL.ANDTHAT MAIM
OR SULPHATE OF ALUMINA
OR 0001C At,UMINIC SUL,
PHATE Is NOT ONE OF,
THEM, THE WOROS "NO
A‘UM" WITHOUT THE IN
GREDIENTS IS NOT SUFFIe
'ENT. MAGIC SAKI NG
PoWDER 004T6 No MORE
THAN THE ORDINARY
KINDS. FOR E00140MY,814Y
THE ONE POUND TINS,
E. Wrn GILLETT COMPANICLIMITED -
WINNIPEG TORONTO• ONT., MONTREAL
INAmtrut *Kum ouLt'
TI
11111 II *Ow
11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 1111111111/111111M1111111111111 Iflit11111
111111I RECRUIT HOSPITALS BARE
HMO MEN
Canada Will Re4Se More Men at
Once,
Will Have 94,000 Soldiers Under
Arms.
Ottawa Despatch -The Clovernment de.
aided to -day to bring the number of men
being remitted in the Dm-M.01m8 for war
Purposes .up to 50,000. TMswill be in
additionto the 10,000 men now doing*
guard and garrison duty throughout the
Dominion, but will include the 16,000,
now being mobilized for iterylee witb the
second contingent, and the four regiments
of horse, comprising 2,400 men, which are
being raised as mounted rifles, It was
felt that with conditions of unemploY-
mitt as they are at present the im-
mediate recruiting and training of the
additional numbers, which in any case
will be required later, was advisable,
With these recruited, Canada win have
94,000 nion under arms. These are made
up as follows: 34,000 already in Eng-
land, 16.000 for the second contingent and
34,000 more to be recruited at am
- . •
SPAIN TO AID
Secret Agreement Will Mean Help
for the Allies.
New York Despatch -A .cable from
Madrid to the Tribune says:
It is said on good authority that a
secret agreement has beea made by
winch the attitude of Spain will be
more than friendly to the allies. Ac-
cording to this agreement, Great Bri-
tain will not interfere with the ship-
ments to Spanish ports, the Spanish
Government giving a guarantee that
no part of those shipments are to bo
re-exported to Germany.
The export trade from Spain will
also be protected, and in return the
Spanish Government will see to it that
the activities of German agents and
spies, which infest every neutral coun-
try, are checked as much as possible
in the Spanish domialons. According
to this plan, the Government has re-
quested all newspapers to print no
news of French military activities in
North Africa. It is said that Clerntan
agents took advantage of such news
and transmitted it to Germany. ..
• The protection of export trade in
Spain is important, and Producers of
fruits, whose interests have been
greatly injured by the war, are urging
the Government to take immediate
steps to prevent them from. behig
ruined. At a meeting held yesterday
at Valladolid, the idea was discussed
of limiting the production by reducing
the area of cultivation.
MET JUSTICE *
Interned Germans Tried Flight
and Were Shot.
Paris Cable. -Authentic news
was received here from official sources
to -night that many German prisoners
of war were killed and many others
were injured yesterday in an out-
break in a concentration .camp in
England. While your correspondent
is unable to obtain details of the out-
break or to get a telegram on the
subject to or from England, he is as-
sured that the facts stated .above are
•
authentic.
There are eight concentration camps
in the British Isles for the German
prisoners of war. • ,
These camps are located at Alder-
shot, Newbury, Dorchester, Queens-
berry, Lancaster, Dyfrim Hall (near
Chester), Edinburgh and Templemore,
Treiaind'
The Aldershot camp is at Frith
Hill. That at Newbury Is established
on the famous race course. At Dor-
chester the men are quartered in bar -
reeks. Two abandoned factory build-
ings have been transformed into quar-
ters for' tile prisoners at Queensberry,
Similar accomModations have been se-
cured at, Lancaster, At Templemore
the Military barracks have been con-
verted into prison rooms, and at
Edinburgh the camp is established in
the open, while Dyfrim Hall, a large
country mansion, is ased to bailee the
officers.
a
"There's only wan thing Ot hey
against liquor." "An phteev't's that,
O'Briert?" "Shure, if 1 dhrliik beer bi
get full before I'n1 drunk, an' if Oi
illarink Whiskey 01 get dleratik before
Olati full."--13oston Transeript,
the dotaintoies in the 'United Xing- eeeeree.,
done itt respect of debt, Services Mid
purchases in the English market, thus Dap of R henlatiS-
ru
Setting frethese e, In se far as obli-
Now Over !
gations represent expeledittire not
arising out of the crisis eorrespoilde Wonderful Miracles Worked by "NervilineP
itheUlnatiall is the greatest test
Nervillne luta to Meet. It Mires pain,
big and little, but to rheuitiatics espe-
chilly It is a. great blessing, just as it
le to those who suffer from tiettralgia,
selatieit, luinbago, Stiffness or enlarged
joints,
medical Supplies for European
Armies Are Nearly Gone.
New York, Nov. 23.-A distressing
lack ea medical supplies far the
wounded on the battlefields of Eur-
ope is Shown by appeals received by
various relief organizaticms here and
by the tremendous orders received
from the warring nations by Anted -
taxi manufacturers of Sale Materials.
Reports received at Red Cross head-
quarters from nurses attached, to some
of the hospital units sent to 'Europe
by that organization show that the
supply of absoroent cotton, bead -
ages, gauze, anaesthetics, iodine and
alcohol and similar necessities are ut-
terly inadequate.
Servian h.ospitals ran short of, an-
aesthetics three weelcs ago, and surgi-
cal operations there have since been
performed while wounded were still
conscious. according to Red Gross re-
ports. Many deaths from shock of
operations are reported. From nurses
in French hospitals come such state-
ments as "bandages,' medicines and
.ambulance necessities are like the
"treasures of kings. Gauze and anti-
tetanique serum are very difficult to
get and cotton is disappearing." •
It is also reported that there is
a great shortage of surgical instru-
ments in the field hospitals behind the
armies, -
"his country does not know the
awful' need of medical supplies in
Europe," said Cranton Brenton, New
York. war relief director of the Red
Cross, to -day. "Imagination cannot ex-
ceed the horrors resulting from the
lack of them. We are doing all we'
can, but there is a great and pressing
need of money to purchase these sup-
plies."
•
GURKHAS' WORK
Pour in Night 'Attack Cause a
German Tragedy.
In the Pas de Calais, Cable -The
narrative of the heroic desperate
fighting in which the British troops
have been engaged etound Ypres has
tended to obscure the fact that the
line ot the Imperial army extends to
the south Belgian border .to the
neighborhod of La Bassee, and that
here, too, fighting has been. very
fierce. It is here that the Indian di-
vitions have been engaged for several
days. They hay() had to face a terri-
fic assault, and the ranks were daily
thinned by the murderous fire from
heavy artillery and machine, guns,
against which they had little oppor-
tunity of showing their prowess in
the kind of warfare in' which they are
most useful, the charge and stealthy
night attack; occasionally, however,
they have done wonders in this way.qompany of Ghurkas had been
terribly worried one day by, fire from
a certain German trench. 200 yards
from their own, at each end of which
a mitrailleuse was posted. At night-
fall they determined to have done with
it. Secretly and silently four men left
the trench and crept away into the
darkness. An hour passed, two
hours and three, and nothing happen-
ed. Then just before dawn came the
alarm. There was a sudden cry of
toraor from the German lines, then,
mingled with shoats and shots. After
a minute's struggle in the dark
against an invisible foe, who slashed
and stabbed without being seen, .the
Germans, seized with pate, bolted,
and a rear rifle fire blazed out along
the whole front, but four happy
Gurkhas slunk back to their Com-
rades unscratched. When dawn broke
the German trench 'lay untenanted,
save' by two silent mitrailleuses, and
the gashed and bleeding bodies of fif-
teen of its defenders,
•IX
VOTES WILL AID WOMEN,
(Rochester Times)
It is not necessary to believe in Wo.
man suffrage to undertake how the bal-
lot will make women a more potent tee-
ter in public affairs. Any body of' citi-
zens, men or women, aro more strongly
Porlified and tire able to accomplish Moro
in the way of civic betterment if they
CD.11 vote. • "
Wigg --1 can't 4m-atte otit that fellow'
Moues. H's a paradox. Wagg--Yes,
I've linown hire to pawn his watch to
have a good time.
Customer -Forty' cents for a hair -
Out is Pretty steep. Don't you take
soneethiag off for cash? Barber -Sure.
t"aFkaet hoefrf, wItilerr eh :rile the antipodes?"
"Ask your mother; she knows all the
neighbors' business."-Bufal6 Express.
ing sum in the donthilOne for loeal
war eXPenditetre,
Save ill Very eXceptional circum.
stances, where separate naval or mili-
tary operettas are being carried On
by the Doininion Itself, he part Of the
advances. is to be need for cash re-
mittances from the United Ithigclone.
*0•
stEEL PLANYNCOPENs.
Chicago, Nov, 2a.-1wo thousand
men, who were thrown ottt of em-
ployinent early last pring, returned
to War% Sit the South Chidago plant
Of the Illinola Steel Company to -day,
When the rail and atretetural mills
Were ro.openett,
Arthur H. Yotrug, superintendent of
labor at the rollr was autlaority for
Val, statement 1 t the Vieille wavild
Ike retrain to " witklIn a few
*Mkt,
•
•
Its Strange Power is the
Marvel of Thousands it
Has Cured.
S'Ou will WeleOlne the goOd news
that "Nerviline' rapidly relievos the
meat exerticiating Mite,
Netwilliee penetrates deeply' latd the
tissue, and possesses pain -subduing
power at least five times greater than
' anything heretofore tliscovered. 'Its
curative influence upon rheumatic
Pains is really wonderful. '
Nerviline hi offered to the people of
this community under a positive guar.
suttee of its reliabletietra.
- As a curative agent of iteverest.pain,
every rheurnatie should test this great
rantetly.
itemember this: There is nothing
harmful ht Nerclittie.
Yon Oen 1.186 it tretlY on,your chit'
droll for their aches raid paints. 1118
dependable, reliable, safe, Nothing 'to
comet good old Nervillrie as it general
Ifamily rnioy,
Get the large 50 -cent fairtily bottle;
It% far More etortornical than the 25 -
cent trial size, Sold hlr ileatera ti'mff-
whom or direot from The Cedetrrk-
venial Ctea Itialletad, Oftitorall,
I/