Ontario Community Newspapers

Daily British Whig (1850), 5 Aug 1918, p. 5

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Out They Go Hclusiv Every garment of summer wear in the store must be cleared this week sure. Regardless of Cost Fall shipments have started to arrive and we must make room at once. WE NEVER CARRY OVER To another season no matter what the loss. 'SEE WHAT YOU CAN SAVE HERE T.J.O Connor 260 Princess St. Higher up street but al GROCERIES AND PROVISIONS Are costly these days. It is necessary for you to buy the best. Our store is stocked with the best of every thing in our lines C. H. Pickering, Grocer and Meat Dealer 490 and 492 Princess St Phone 830. | Usnsada Food Board License No. 85-2152, ) The Telgmann School of : Music Plano, violin and other stringed Instruments; elocution and dra- Matic art. Pupils may begin at any date. Terms on application. Engagements for concerts ac- cepted. 216 Frontenac Street. : Phone 1610. ee ------ Wh THREE FULL LOTS FOR SALE On Nelson Street ~ CHEAP W. H. Godwin & Son and Real Estate. | 8 Brock st. Phono 424 ay RE fh dh fe te a oo ry SARGENT Wil b. b b. b : + PTOI Fwwa Ahk Aik CHASE THOSE TELL YOU How Cor, Prificess and Montreal Streets. Bargent's Satisfactory Service. Telephone 800 ways lower in price. a COKE ORDERS ONLY TAKEN The James Sowar Coal Co. Phone 155. What Is Need ? Many people buy lux uries today and put off buying necessities. There is 'no greater need than "good eye~ sight. If your vision is poor we can give you good glasses to improve it. J. J. Stewart Opt.D. Opp. Post Oilice. Kingston, Ont. ; yy 0SQUITOES Phone 41. # Arahat: RRR oo 0 ds | A Btn op, ers gi ~. Str. Britannic Order Your Montrea I Freight By the Independent Line and send your shipments Gan. , Brockville, Cornwall, Montreal, and intermediate ports to the Ferry Dock. Telephone 2195. © Hl = t army value is it to a nation of ¢ part, WAR REMEMBRANCE SUNDAY A GARRISON PARADE ' TO | | GEORGE'S CATHEDRAL. : Bishop Bidwell the Preacher--¥Prin- cipal Bruce Taylor Officiated ot | Chalmers and Cooke's,' | The garrison parade to £¢. "George's Cathedral on Sunday morn- ing in remembrance of uhe fourth ry of the war was one of the la st witnessed in years. Tae following were ithe units in dhe par- ade: jist Depot Batalion, E.O.R., under command of Licut.-Col. Smart; 3rd Battalion, C.G.R., un- der command of Lieut. -Col. Craw- ford, IC.A.8IC.; 3rd district depot, Queen's Military Hospital, Ongwan- ada Hospital; G.W.V.A. and the Army and iINavy Veterans. The 1st Depot Battalion band and the G. W. V.A. band enlivened the march. Civilians would not all be seated, and many stood at the back of the church and in the 'porch. The service was Wery impréssive The lessons were read by Rev. Mr Walley. [The Bishop of Ontario preached the sermon, and the di- recied attemtion do the 'memorial chai:cter of the service. "We ought to remember those who have given their lives for our sakes dur- ing ithe [past four years They re- present to ms the ddeal of obedience even unto death. Much of the glamor and romance of war long since passed away and men are called upon to endure hardships of an almost indescribable nature and sights and sounds that are appall- ing to ithe mormaly constituted. When we think of these young men with life before them putting all their aspirations aside we thank God for the splendid lesson they have taught us. [Many of them we used to look upon as commonplace individuals and not possessing the stuff they have shown in geal and devotion to duty and helpfulness to their fellows. (We thank God, too, that the occurrences through which they have passed hpve not brutaliz- ed them ms it mi have 'done. Many of us have en unable to see where the path jof duty Mes, but they saw it clearly and followed it . to the end funfalteringly | "When we remember those who died let us remember those who have come back maimed and brok- en and our debt to them." The preacher showed that what we should fear most is the death of the soul \ General Maunsell, acting G.0.C., was stationed with his staff in front ST. ¥ 'of the (Customs House and took the salute as the troops marched past. Principal Taylor at Chalmers, | Chalmers and Cooke's congrega- | tions held amnion war remembrance services jon Sunday jin Chalmers in the miorning and in [Cooke's in the evening. Principal Bruce Taylor, "of Queen's University, officiated at both services. In the morning Dr. Taylor itook as m text the vision of Habakkuk: 'For the vision is yet for an appointed time, but at the end it shall speak and not lle, | though it garry, wait for dt, because {1 will surely come, it will not jtarry." i In a masterly review of the chief i points in the war, in which heghim- 'self took a part in France, Dr. Tay- lor said that God was justifying "himself after these years of fierce conflict. ginning to break. Though the vi- sion tarried, it was surely coming-- when Tight would prevail.: The -old {world has passed away and jit' was a new world in which we are living and would live in the future. Dr. {Taylor declared that the true me- | morial to our loved ones who have died in defence of right would be a better country for the generations [to come. (A year hence "e hoped | that the bells would ring for peace and joy, but if the vision was not EAA A AA AA AAA AA erin ve. 40 DE fulfilled yet and the war was i to continue for another year and "still another, he was sure that the people of Canada' and the British 'mpire would see it through to the very end, so that the blood shed and ithe suffering endured would not have been in vain. 'At St. James' Church, At St. James' church on Sunday evening Capt. Rev. Sparling gave a splendid and most appropriate ser- { mon on the war. He spoke of a wri- ter saying, "Forget the past, don't Worry about the future, the present {18 here, use it." "To éxplain this, the | sacrifice of the men at the front was mentioned, and he asked, "What can we do at home?" "We must do our Some are engaged in muni- tion works, in conservation of food, | but our greatest duty is that we must | endeavor to preserve the national conscience, the soul of the Batioh. the army win the war and the people at jhome, by forgetting God and by sin- i ful-acts, lost the soul of the nation? [Our duty then is to- keep alive the] (Soul and conscience of the nation. | Rome is an example of a nation that fell through not being backed up at home by the people. The warriors Won many countries, but the people at home grew fat with riotous living and forgot the sacrifice of the war- riors that had gained them wll their wealth, and the northern tribes con- =| quered Rome. : 'The enemies of a nation are two fold--inside and outside. An enemy B= | within the walls is many times more has | The light Iwas now be- oo ¢ » MONDAY, AUGUST 5, 19 Sh -------------- day Columbus discovered Americal marked a great epoch in the history} (of the world. The battle-of the Boyne 'and the flight of the Jews from Egypt } Were great epoch-making events, but none mark a greater epoch than Aug. 4th, 1914, for the 'titanic struggle that has followed -i8 to determine whether Might or Right is to rule the | wogd. Germany. threw down fhe gauntlet and said she must-have a place in the sun. England said there must be no oppressioni, but liberty for all and treaties must be observed and respected " He took a retrospect of the past four years and showed what Canada had done and how she has established a place among the na- tions of the future. In concluding he said thankfulness should be the key note of the day. At the evening service®D. Couper sang Kipling's "Recessional" in good voice, s . Queen Street Methodist. That history repeats itself in the lives of nations as well as in the (lives of men was the theme of a splendid sermon by Rev. John D. i Elis" in Queen Street Methodist church on Sunday evening. Rev. Mr. Ellis drew a parallel between the struggle of the Israelites against the Philistines in biblicai days, in! which the former went down to! dizastrous defeat. The analogy, he remarked, between the Israelites, a decadent race, who had gone forth against the wishes of Moses, bear- ing in front of their hosts the ark of the covenant as a safeguard for their army, and the Germans who had prepared for forty years to take | part in the clash of arms, and who had launched forth in terrific at- tacks, calling upon God to ald them in their cause. But, like the Israel- ites, it was not to the just God who i rules the nations, but to the god of war who destroys them from whom they invoked ald, and it was to this deity that their prayers were ad- dressed. eo Mr. Elis believed = that there were signg that the fate of the 18. Pe ey &o ' TET -2 Israelities 'was to befall the Ger- | mans, and in the final clash of the nations he unged his congregation to bear their share by showing con- fidence and sympathy with the men who 'are fighting their battles and by keeping a stout heart in times of uncertainty and disdppointment, trusting that in the end right must prevail. At St. Andrew's Church, In St. Andrew's church, at both serivces, Rev. Alexander S. Kerr, of | Belleville, occupied the pulpit, in the absence of Rev. J. W. Stephen. Spe- cial services commemorative of the | fourth anniversary of the war were held and in his sermons Rev. Nr. Kerr referred to the valiant fight that was being made by the millions in All our Ladies' Pan- amas and Children's Straw Hats 4 the armies of the Allies for liberty and justice. He prayed that the struggle would soon be concluded with a righteous and victorious peace for the cause of the Empire. The ser- vices were well attended. IN MARINE CIRCLES, -- The Movements of Vessels Reported ed Along the Harbor. The steamer Jesh arrived Dswege with coal for the mill. The steamer Jex is in port from Oswego with coal for Robert Craw- ford. . The schooner Andrews arrived from Oswego with coal for Robert Crawford. from cotton All our Men's Straw Hats and Panamas CAMPBELL BROS. Kingston's Largest Hat Dealers - em The schooner Maggié I. arrived in port with a cargo of scrap iron from bay ports. a The steamer Waffle arrived from Oswego with coal for Swift's. The steamer Chamberlain and barge cleared on Sunday for. Erie. | M.T. Co's. Bulletin--Tug Thom- son from Mofitreal, with two light barges and cleared with the barges Quebec and Kingston for = Char- lotte; tug Laura Grace arrived with | barges Hilda and Davie from Os- | wego and cleared for Montreal: steamer India passed up with the barge Burma for Lake Erie; steam- er Cataract arrived lght from Mont- real; steamer Advance from Mont- real arrived light, and will clear for Lake Erie; tug Weaver arrived from Montreal with one light bange. Tug Magnolia is due to arrive with the barges Winnipeg and Dun- more with coal from Lake Brie; steamer Pawnee is due to arrive to- day with coal from Lake Erie, and has the barge Godfrey in tow from Port Dalhousie; the Godfrey will tranship Hs cargo of grain inte river barges here. Bale at Prevost's, Brock Street, Boys' Batbriggan underwear, 35¢ each; men's Balbriggan underwear, all sizes, 50c each; men's combin- ations, big assortment; men's colored shirts from $1.00 up; also great stock of ready made clothing. : Lt.<Col. Alex. Turner Killed. Word has ben received in Hamilton that Lt.-Col. Alex. Turner who al- though only twenty-six years of age had command of an Imperial Regi- ment, had been killed in action. He was a grandson of the late Senator Turner. He graduated at the Royal Hot Weather Specialties Grape Juice, 10c, 30c and 535c. Lime Juice ..... 25¢ and 45¢ Nelson's Ice Cream Bricks, 35¢ The hot season will soon be over, so relieve your thirst and do not suffer, PROUSE'S Drug Store Opposite St. Andrew's Church. Phone 82. THERAPION No. FHERAERN NS No. 3 for Chronic » + Beni Co. HaverstockRd.,) od TRADE MARKES WORD °THERAPION ' IS ON SESS SE Tek ve SeRoR buchesh yr SERVICE PINS A very appropri- Military College and early went to war. He won the IX8.0, and Military Cross, and had been mentioned in despatches three times, ¥ ate symbol for those who are doing their bit overseas. ; Sterling silver, en- "four leaves, 50 Cents. 'Same in gilt metal 25 Cents. SREERFNEERRS. SNNENNERERERNENE | | ameled, with one tol KINNEAR & 'ESTERRE 2 __PAGE FIVE or r------------ LADIES' WHITE CANVAS PUMPS High and medium heels. These are new goods just received. Special Price v Abernethy's Shoe Store "Where the Pretty Shoes Come From." w | RHANANRAOERNNAREOR RRR We Can Save You By buying during our big Midsummer Furniture Sale A rare chance to furnish a home either for pres- ent or future use, during our big sale. j- Comfort for everyone. Economy for all. JAMES Phone 747. The Busy Store With the Large Stock. Food License No, 8-768. Wm.ClarkLtd, Will demonstrate their famous line of N Food Delicacies In our store every day this week. You are invited to call in and sample these high class oods. A booklet on the preparation of the W. Clark 14d products, given away free. Henderson's Grocery Phone 279. 59-61 Brock St. A square house to deal with. a ga Wood's Great ish Femedy. Te AN RL or the whol nervous eystem, makes new Blood Debitity, Mentat ant Bran Werey. Lerma lal and Brain h dency. J 2 of Ener, Jotpitation of the { a Th f box, sis Heat oar. a will eure, PEold by all ifed in plain pkg. on receint of phiet mailed free. + TORONTO, OKT, a INE COL FOR SALE--Brick Dwe Corner of Mdck and Victoria Street, place, hot Easy terms. den ground floor, fire I on ist Sept. $3900, Tel. 7 em TO INVESTORS CITY of CALGARY 1% -- Gold Debentures Due 1st June, 1928 { Interest parable ist June and wt We have many other attractive | R. D. SUTHERLAND k nce, Real Estate, Bonds maura Fruit ! UNITED GROCERY for all kinds of the best FRESH FRUIT . ? Customers go away dally ad. vertising our business. 138 Princess Bt BEN LEE, Mgr. / Kingston, 8 rooms, inclad | u _ 18 Market St. ; WE BUY AND SELL i i. Ce Satis ; Ryerson i

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