iy i WERE KLIN HE UFRUIT-A-TIVES" SAVED MBS. WEBBER'S LIF After Three Doctors Had Given Her Up Clanbrassie, Ont, Two years ago, the doctor made forty- four calls on me and then said he had done oll hie could for me. I was suffer- ing with intense Kidney Trouble and severe inflammation had set in. Two other doctors were consulted and agreed that nothing eould be done to help me. On the recommendation of I took " Fruit-a-tives" and they cured me. Today, 1 take " Fruit-a-tives' 8 my only medicine. 1 am in excellent health and * Fruit-a-tives" is the medicine that cured me after I had been at death's door for months. 1.8m glad to Le able to give you this testimonial, It may benefit some other woman suffering as I suffered, as I believe that 1 would not be alive to-day had I not used "Fruit-a-tives." Mrs, P. E. WEBBER. " Frullen-tives "--the famous fruit modicine-~is acknowledged the greatest kidney cure in the world. 50¢ a bex, 6 for $2.70; trial size, 26c. At dealers or from Fruit-a-tives Limited, Ottawa. Wah Long' Rf ig Ww alu an our isundry tween Bi your Crhistmas Photos. taken. Weather is favorable. We have . the line of mounts in the city. THOMAS COPLEY, Prone 987. ae 3 po o 8h hen atin one in the n= tor line. Bt hnages given on all nda repairs and new wor also. osareot, ites, all Made, 3 . attention. Shas 60 Queen Street. Jd. E .Hutcheson AUCTIONEER and APPRAISER. -- Be Good to - Yourself and the world will be good to you. The way is to keep stomach, | liver, eys and els right. And you'll find great help in BEECHAMS PILLS Said Everywhere. in boxes 8c, "FOR THE "XMAS TRADE yon, SooN 19, rm, up, ene offering > A Special Discount every rao 0.4 stock. e were vel fortunate this fall in securing a fine lot of Antiq Furniture, which we are offering for the holidays at very low Frise Call a see our by, lot of Btoves and Stove 1ttings, Ranges and Heaters of all sorts and sizes ver Pe Household nd Bric-a- Brie of all kinds ught and sold, Or WTR RR RT SRSA PLEAS 0 THE | BE, THE FOOT AAD {THE POGKEFB00K # LESSES, and Chatham Sts, All | an is a soul and has a fit 35 STUDENT OF PSYCHIC PHENO- MENA ARGUES QUESTION. He Quotes Authorities to Show That Genuine Tests Have Been Made-- Body Loses Weight When Death Occurs, Kingston, Nov. 28.--(To the Editor): I noticed a agraph by the "Lamp- man" recently on the question, "Has the Soul Weight?" Some one asl him his opinion, and he answered in the negative. Were you really asked such a question, Mr. Lampman, or did you propound it yourself so as to get a whack at some of our "small-so citizens," or to try to draw some One out on the subject ? If some one ask- ed the question it shbws that there is some interest taken in psychelogical subjects, even in old Kingston; end with your permission, M-. Editor, I would like to "butt in" and have my vy. Two or three years ago some doc- tors, in Massachusetts, had patients, whom they knew were about to die, placed on nicely balanced scales, and they noticed that immediately the pa- tient ceased to live the scales showed a loss of weight of a fraction of an ounce. This experiment was repeated several times with practically the same results. It is needless to sd, that your statement about logs of weight after the lapse of some hours is not to be compared with these test cases. The doctors making the tests came to the conclusion that there were no physical or physiological rea- sons for these very # ha in weight, and going on the belief, 1 pre- sume, that the soul leaves the when a person dies, this must be the cause of the difference in weight. You say it is "absurd" to suppose that the soul has weight. If by soul is meant the spirit or life principle in man, then it would seem absurd to suppose it had weight. But let us Jook at this question a little bit criti- cally, and in the light of modern psy chological research. : The ordinary man thinks of himself as consisting of a body certainly, and possibly a soul, though he usually speaks of himself as possessing a soul and being responsible for saving it. Now, if the soul is the spirit or ego, then we should say that he is entire- ly wrong in supposing that he has & soul, but he would be quite right if he said that he was a soul. The or- dinary statement is a comical invers , | sion of the fact; for the truth is that body which is simply one of the vestments he puts > A aware of the theory that nothing exists but matter, and that all the thoughts and aspirations of man are nothing but chemical reac- tions among the constituent particles of the grey matter of the brain, but as there are thousands of facts for which this theory does not account, 1 think we may dismiss it in favor of a more rational one. There are hundreds of cases on re cord in which a man has gone away from his physical body in trance, or under the influence of anaethetics, or even in ordinary sleep and is found that under such circumstances, when he is far away from his physical brain, with its grey matter and its chqmicad action Fr can still think and observe and remember just as Ww he has his physical vehicle in use. It is therefore very evident that man is not the physical body since he can exist apart from it. (Read the pro- ceedings of the society Peychical Re- search.) The ordinary materialistic theory does mot explain these occur ences at all, and because it cammot ex- plain them, it usually denies them, and declares that they do not happen, 'which is. disingenuous, for. very little examination proves conclusively that they ha constantly. Since man can exist apart from the physical body it does not follow that he exists without any body or that the physical is the only one he has. Man has not only one body, but several. St. Paul speaks of two of them in 1. Cor. XV.--A natural body and a spiritual body.'Now what does he mean by that ? I amy afraid, many good people read these things and at- tach no particular meaning to them. They read, for ex le, of a soul and a spirit in St. Paul's writings, and bocause we in these days are so ignorant of psychology as to confuse these terms, they imagine that St. Paul was equally ignorant and was employing them as synonyms. He uses two entirely distinct Greek words, pneuma, spirit, and psyche, soul. "when St. Paul speaks of a pa- tural body and a spiritual body he means two entirely different things, just as with the soul and the spint. most. people would probably admit that, but they think vaguely that this spiritual body is something of which we know nothing--some vehicle assum od by man after his death. Truely mon has another body Desides the physical, but he has it now and all the time. possesses a spiritanl natural ody ; or, ° g Th Fie ithil it 2 iis i! 2 F PEzsig fe HIE Eiclese There would not be a case of indi- gestion here if readers who are sub- Jct to Stomach trouble knew the tremendpus anti-ferment and digestive virtve contained in Diapepsin. This { harmless preparation will digest «a heavy meal without the slightest fuss or _dwcomfort, and relieve the sourest, acid stomach in five minutes, besides overcoming sll foul, nauseous odors from the breath. Ask your pharmacist to show you the formula, plainly printed on each 30-cent case of Pape's Diapepsin, then you will readily understand why this promptly cures Indigestion and re moves such symptoms as Heartburn, a feeling like a lump of lead in the stomach, Belching of Gas and Ericta- tions of undigested food, water brash, Nausea, Headache, Biliousness and many other: bad symptoms; and, be sides, you will pot need laxatives to keep your stomach, liver and intes- tines clean and fresh. If your Stomach is sour and full of gas, or your food doesn't digest, and your meals don't seem to fit, why not get a filty-dent case from your drug. gist and make life worth living ? A solute relief from Stomach misery and perfect digesiion of anything you eat 14 sure to follow five minutes after, and, besides, one case is sufficient to cure a whole family of such trouble. Surely a harmless, inexpensive pre- paration like Diapepsin, whieh will always, either at daytime or during night, relieve your * stomach misery ang digest your meals, is about as handy and valuable a thing as you could have in the house. of the body does not convey any 8s surance of the soul's' death. Every physical analogy is against such a superficial notion in nature. We never see things beginning or coming io an end, change is what we see, not ori- gin or termination." "Death is a change, indeed, but it is not anmihila- tion." And speaking of pre-existence he says: 'Persons living now might not have been individuals before, but they were chips or fragments of a great master mind of spirit and light. He did not mean to say only thai they were parts of the deity, he meant something more detailed than that. This is not an obvious truth and one easily formulated, but a truth, difficult of expression. That great man Tolstoi, who has just made the change called death, was said not to have be- lieved in the survival of the soul after death, but note these significent words of his reported by a correspondent during one of his late illnesses. He said : "One is so well off when ill, you feel detached from all bodily things, you see the only life of the spirit soul. There ia nothing terrible about death. It is an abyss, they say. The comparison is false. When ill, yon seem to be ascending an easy hill-slope, which at certain heights, is curtained off by some light stuf. On the other side of the curtain there is more life, but behind you death." Thanks to spirituslistic phenomena, psychic subjects are being studied as never before by the Christian world, and we will know more of these things by and by. To quote Lodge again: "We are still barely emerging from the ruthlessnéss = of savage competition. The earth was still Tnll of darkness and cruel habitations, but it was our fault and not the fault of nature. Civilized people should be above mere animal distress. Humanity was good enpigh if it obtained a chance. There was hope in the air, and the time would come when they would realize that Christ was walking not on the waters of Gennesaret, bui on the Thames." And 1 would add, Lloyd- George is doing something to bring that, time about. --~A STUDENT OF PSYCHIC PHENO- MENA, It is expected that the dominion im- migration returns, this year," will to- tal 325,000, the influx continuing at a most gratifying rate. Formerly it ex- tended over the spring months chiefly. Trimmings and chimneys for every kind and make of lamps, at Robert son Bros'. Christmas presents stare the face weeks ahead just note that's coming due. More Deadly man in s bad as a The common cold is held responsible for a multitude of human ills. Colds kill more people than When not avoided they can often be hurried from the system by keeping the filtering and excretory organs tive. ixisy ff } ifs 2 Fis Than The Plague | 3: NOBODY EVER PRAISES HIM FOR HIS FIDELITY. Mothers Have Plenty of Hymns Ex- tolling Them, Says Pastor, Who Gives Prize for One for Men. Chicago, Nov. 29.--When Rev. W. E. Barton, of the First Conzregational church; Jast week, offered g prize for the words of & bymm that would extol the virtues of "father," he voiced bis ideas thus: "Our relig ious hymnals are filled with % to mothers, and for those 'In Peril on the Sea," but none for the fathers who have a living to earn and a family to Support, "It is the fathers--the 'ok ' you might se are doing their dfty fuisitally and making a living for the amily. "To my mind, the beauties of fath- erhood are second only to those of motherhood. A man resists twice as much temptation as a woman, and when he is a Christian he is one all through. : ey | bi this song of fatherhood to be full dramatic vigor and Christ- ian sentiment. The music must not be' too lady-like, either, but must be full of vigor and fro." His call for such a hymn of praise has been quickly amswered. Sunday, to the music of the Lucia Sextette, his congregation sang the following stanzas: We have thanked Thee for our moth- ers, And we thank Thee still again: Now for fathers and for brothers-- Lord, we thank Thee for good men. For our fathers who begot us, And who paths of patience trod, And whose righteous manhood taught us Of the fatherhood of God. Bless our Lrothers and ow neighbors In their tasks of hand and brain; Strengthen all men for their labors, Help them bear the load and strain, Bless the men who face the da Of the battle and the sea; hers Guide the men who roam as strangers, Making paths where roads shall, be. Save the manhood of our nation: Guide us with Thy staff and rod: Make each coming generation Know the fatherhood of God. Fas aus fisturs and our mothers t we've prayed, and aim; Ncw for fathers and for Rn Father; hear our prayer for men. ------------------ Shop Early. "For several years an effort has been made to lessen the extra pressure of work which during the holiday sea- son fallg on the salespeople in shops," says Margaret E. Sangster, in the Woman's Home Companion for Decem- ber, "on those who deliver goods, on the post office employees and in the express offices the country through. Never have I seen young woman so tired, and dragged out as are those who serve the public in the weeks preceding Christmas. The hours at: that time are much longer than usual, and the endeavor is to meet the demands of anxious and hurried cus- tomers who do. not know what they want, and are bewildered amid the variety of tempting articles displayed. nesienlly Ani. seutally, the clerks, messengers, jers and every one concerned in wercantile pursuits in the holiday shopping season are worn to .. Much of their fatigue might be prevented were buyers con- siderate, and if the caution come too late for this year, will not those who son? Books and pac sent by mail and gifts transpit express as well as the vast bulk of Christmas correspordence should stretch over De- cember ingtead of being congested in the two or' three days before Christ- mas" I ------------------ Toronto Street Market. Toronto, Nov, 29.~Wheat, white, r Lush., 85¢, to 8c: wheat, red, per bush., S5¢. to 87c.; wheat, gloss, per ., 37c.; peas, per bush. 83¢. to 80. barley, . per bush., 60c. to 63c.; rye, per bush., 67c. buckwheat, per bush., 48¢c,; hay, timo- thy, per bush., $17 to $19; hay, clov- er, per ton, $11 to $16; straw, per ton, $17 to $18. Alsike cloven--Fancy, per .» $1.50 to #8; No. 1, per bush, $7 to $7.50; No. 2, per bLush., $6.50 to 87; rell clover, No. 1. bush. $7 to $7.25; red clover, No. 2, per hush., $5 to $6.25; red clover, No. 3, per 1 bnsh., 85 to $5.50; dressed 939.50 to $9.75; Sutter, dairy, per 1h., 2c. to 30c.; butter, inlérior, per Ih., 2c, to Wei; new laid, per dézen, 50c, ucks, spring, per lb, lc. i per Ib, 13c., to 4c.; ES if {the Varsity students from blame Notes on Football and Other Field x Events, The Hamilton authorities exonerate for damage done on Saturday. Ottawa Clifisides have all. of last season's players and are after the Al lan cup, held by St. Michael's College. Hackenschmidt won from" Dr. Roller in two straight falls at Montreal The "Russian Lion" is now at the'top of his form. The National Hockey Association magnates have the upper hand of the mutinous players who want the salary limit abolished. Toronto baseball team will train in " {the south again next spring, but the scene of the camp has not been decid ed on. It will probably be Charlottes ville, Va., again. The senior rugby championship of the. dominion will be cont , in 1911, on the grounds of the winners of the Interprovincial and Intercollegi- ate Unions. John J. McGrath, of New York, has gathered a team of American and Na- tional Baseball League celebrities, in- cluding Mathewson, Gilbert, Zimmer man, Doyle, and others, for an indoor baseball tour during the winter. Toronto Globe : University of To ronto won eight games this season without losing' one. Their line was not crossed in either semi-final or fimal against the champion teams of other unions, and they scored thirty-eight points in the Canadian championship Somes to tem scored against them. 'hat ought to be an argument in sup- rt of the contention that Intercol egiate football is "it." Toronto News : By his appointment of James T. Sutherland, of Kingston, to the executive of the Ontario Hoc- key Association; President Louis Blake Duff has paid a very worthy tribute to one of the most enthusiastic ama- teur sportsmen in the east. Although Mr. Sutherland has been identified with hockey wince before the 0. H.A. came into existence, he has never sought office of apy kind in the big association. In his career he has man aged and coached many championship hockey teams in the old Limestone city, and has been noted for his fair- minded attitude on all occasions. Last Comfort, 5 s definite, beneficial action. buy, so more would be purchased. "Anfl we would go out of busimess. But we're not going out of nd confidence that we're mot is based experience with Paychine. Ten years after commenced compounding millions of bottles, fatal cases of diseases. of thousands of unsolicited testi monials And we have grown beginning to be one of the ----- vear the hockey outlook in Kingston was poor, However, under "Jim's" guidance a bunch of green youngsters were brought dut and from ome vie tory to another they climbed upwards until they finally landed the junior O.H.A. championship in a whirlwind finish that will never be forgotten in the old historical ity. At the recent O.HA. annual meeting Nr. Suther land's motion to have the junior age Emit restored to twenty years, was carried in a very decisive manner. Lovers of hockey extend congratula- tions to the stalwart Kingston repre- sentative on the honor shown his city and himself in the appointment. WOMEN WITH NO CONSCIENCE. Those Sympathetic Souls Who Re. : veal All Xomy Secrets. "Some women seem to be absolute ly without conscience in the matter of betraying confidence,' said the so- cial observer. "Usually they are of the sweetly sympathetic kind who urge you to lighten your burden by sharing it with them, assuring you that the 'secret will 'go no farther.' Sometimes they tell necause, having made so many promises of this kind they cannot remember them all, and again they do so merely because the possession of exclusive information makes them seem more important; at any rate, they usually tell, and in this way rumors of engagements, domestic difficulties, of business troubles and many other vital events get - around, and sometimes, in fact, frequently, cause disaster. It is natural that a person more or less lonely in. a mo- ment of joy or of grief should feel the need of human sympathy, but it is equally natural that the news should go further. The prattling dames in sending the secret along the line al ways exact a promise not to tell from the person they tell. Also they . di- vulge the fact that they are breaking the promise they made themselves, but even this reference to the promise does not seem to impress them with the enormity of their act." underwear is made Kingston citizens, Imperial Brand in Kingston, by ™ PAGE NINE. --surely pure Century Salt comes fresh from re irra Vena Processcnsuring perfect Pe ---- Remember that. SRILA SRT M™ money fs "Tost through out-of-date methods in the office. The Underwood Billing Typewriter means an al- almost incredible saving of time and labor and money. UNITED TYPEWRITER Co. J. R. C. DOBBS, KINGSTON. who distribute through our city. $70,000 in whges pon our third of a century's (We have cured many hundreds of t ds of virulent and oftentimes from a small 4 largest pro- prietary manafacturers in this coun-, 'We go to of the earth for try. iid Pd oly SOTEPERREEPERICIRREPRP SCROReeeE 000000000000 IMPERIAL PURE WOOL 24% i > 5 body, when they're In large enough After the first bottle which we would numbers and sufficiently strong. 'When, they're not sufficiently strong, the disease germs devour them and disease holds the body. - xe % we Wor contarion slimuat, Savbe Aatuvs remedies, own have been the most ef- Psychine. Since that time, we have sold many, ficient foe to disease. We have not known defini Just how. a. ely But now scianecs tells us that certain the white corpaseles and their strength. These certain herbs are incorporated Psychine. 10 South Amer- Correct Size, We'd all rather be right than presi: : dent till we get the chance, CEERREEEREEOREEE Imperial Brand Men's Underwear ASK YOUR DEALER FOR IT. Durability, Patent Felled, Seams which will not tear. Latest Styles : Every Garment Guaranteed. ------ MADE ONLY BY -- : Kingston Hosiery Co., Ltd., Kingston, Ont. : | need it make a note for another sea- |} If your dealer cannot supply you write us. Could we afford to buy and give away hundreds of thou- sands of 50-cent bottles of Psychine (pronounced Si- keen) if we did not know from a third of a century's experience that it was -¢ : the greatest vitality-builder < "sw of the age : Hea y You know what it would mean to us These white corpuscles est any germ * Now we don't ask oh to take were Piychiné a preparation without of disease that gains an entrance to the word for the a na effect of Paychine. Fill out the coun pon below, mall it to us and we'll give your druj an order (for which 'we pay him regular retail] price) for a G0-cent bottle of Paychine to be given you free of cost. We will undoubtedly buy and distri bute in this manner hundreds of thou sands' of these 50-cent Bottles of Pay- And we do that to show our entire confidence in this wonderful prepars- We baw in our files many hundreds of these herbs increase the number of 4 .onfidence that has been babed on our 30 years experience with this splendid preparation, with a full know ledge of the hundreds of thousands of cures it has made, Lo COUPON No!134 To the Dr. T. A. SLOCUM, Lud 193-195 Spadina Ave, Toronto advise my © MY REES....ovriersrsssessars avers soserer 4 this bottle to me. © TOWR. cous sarsnsassossassose wossesnals os Street and Number... My Droggists Name... ...covvsvironss % v ' ay, pesenens esnrasnres