SATURDAY; MARCH 11, 1022, THE DAILY BRITISH W HIG. Sunday Services in Churches St. P'aul's--Morning prayer, 11 ~o'cloek. Preacher, Canon FitzGerald, M.A., Sunday school, 3 p.m.; ev- cninng prayer, 7. o'clock. Preacher, Canon FitzGerald, M.A. Péntecostal Tabernacle, 285 Queen street Wm. Browning, evangelist from Glasgow, Scotland, 11 a.m. and 8 and 7.30 p.m., and each evening Curing week. Alb welcome. W.C.T.U.--~The regular meeting of, the Woman's Christian Temperance Ualon will be held in the Y, W. C. A. parlors, Johnson street, on Tuesday, March 14th, at 3.30 p.m. All Indies welcome, St. Andrew's. -- Rév, John W. Stephen, minister, ARhniversary ser- vices, 11 am. and 7 p.m. conduct- ed by Rev. S. Banks. Nelson; D.D., of Knox church, Hamilton. Special music by the choir, 'A very cordial Jnvitation, Is extended to all. Zion ' Presbyterian Church, Pine street--Rev, Edwin H, Burgess, min- ster. 11 a.m., subject, "The Calling of Matthew." Mat, IX 9. 7 p.m. Rev. J. C. Robertson, D.D., of To- ronto, Will 'preach. . Seats free. Everybody welcome, Sabbath school 3 pm. Chalmers Church.--~Rev. R. J. Wilson, D.D., minister. Services at 11 a.m. and 7 p.m., In the morn- ing Rev, Dr. J. C. Robertson, of Toronto, will preach. In the evening the minister will preach. Evening subject: "The Authority of Jesus." You are inivted, Gospel Hall, Upper Princess street ~--Sunday; March 12th. Evangelist Harold Jones, a very. interesting speaker, will take the evening ser- vice, 7 o'clock. His subject will be "Ants, Coneys, Locusts and Spiders'. Wednesday night, regular prayer meeting at 8 o'clock. Come early. Bethel Congregational Church, corner Barrie and Johnson streets. ---A. Sidney Duncan, pastor. Services "11 a.m. and 7 p.m.; Sunday scliool 3 p.m.. Dr. George C. Webb, Toron- to, will speak Sunday. evening. Pray- er meeting, Wednesday, 8 p.m. You are invited. 3 Calvary Congregational Church, corner Charles and Bagot streets.-- Pastor, Rev, A. F. Brown, 144 Clergy street, Phone 1806w. Sunday, 11 a.m., topic, "No Condemnation." 3 p.m., Sunday school; 7 p.m., top- fe, "Ploughing". Monday, 8 p.m. Christlan Endeaver. Wednesday, S$ p.m., prayer meeting. All are wel- © come. n Queen Street Methodist Church, corner of Queen and Clergy streets-- Rev. Walter 8. Lemmon, B.A, B.D, 'minister. © 11 a.m., Rev. Manson Doyle; of the Methodist Church De- partment of Religious Education. 7 pm. Rev. J. A. Waddell. 3 p.m. Su; land Bible classes. sem TER a re comed, ade e NE 4" 1 i % ®7 dy --- St. George's Oathedtal---Second "Sy in _Leat. 8am. holy com- nunloni: 11 a.m., morning prayer. reacher, Rev. R.A. Hilts, MA. D.C.L., general secretary of Board of Religious Education, subject, "Prob- lems in. Religions Education." 3 pm., Sunday echools; 4 pm. holy baptisms; 7 p.m., evensbng. PreacH- er, Rev. W. E.. Kidd. Subject, "Il STROUS TEA Remem- | Address to Young People." Pray | ber the. mission, March 26th, for it. Work for it. Princess Street Methodist Church, --Rev. J.' A. Waddell, minister. | Services 11 a.m., the minister, 7 | p.m., Rev. T. A. Halpenny, B.A.,/| B.D., superintendent of the Ontario | Religious Education Council. Sunday | school, 2.45 p.m.; prayer meeting, | Wednesday, 8 p.m.; Women's Mig- | sionary Society, Thursday, 8 p.m. | Strangers and visitors cordially wel- | comed . Cooke's. Presbyterian Church, Brock street---Rev, T. A. Halpenny, of Toronto, will preach at 11 a.m. The minister, Rey. W. Taylor Dale, will preach at 7 p.m., when there will be special musie, including anthem by choir, appropriate uartette and solo, A cordial fovitation is extend- ad to visitors and studehts, Sunday | school, 11 am. and 3 p.m.; Bible class 3 p.m. Fre i St. Luke's Church, Nelson street. ~--Rev, J. de P. Wright, M.A, B.D., rector, Second Sunday in Lent. 11 a.m., morning' prayer; 2.30 p.m., Sunday schoel and bible classes; 4 p.m., holy baptism; 7 p.m., evening prayer. Music--aAn- them, "Even Me" (Warren), B. J. 8. Wallwork taking the bass solo. Lenten service, Friday, 7.30 p.m, First. Baptist Church, Sydenham and Johnson streets.--Rev. J. §- LaFlair, pastor. 11 a.m., Rev. Geo. T. Webb, D.D., Toronto, will {day evening fr preach. 2.45 p.m.; bible school; 7 p.m., sermon theme (pastor preach- ing) "The Miracle Man." Union street church: 3 p.m., bible school, 7 p.m., public worship, Fred Wil- aon, - Y.M.C.A. secretary, will preach. Present Truth Hall, corner Prin- . Work Harder Than Merely "Enough" By the Rev. You never do permanent damage to a running stream by damming it ----you simply lift it higher, This is merely another way of say- ing that water is sure to find its level. ' It's thé same wey with @ man. It has sometimes been roughly said that you can't keep a good man down; he is sure to get up again when beat- en to the ground. But I like this figure of a "rum- ning stream." It's because it's actu- ally on the move that the attempt to dam it just gives it more force, - When a man's foes attempt to stop him it's a sure sign that he's go- inf\somewhere to do something, or why should they try to hinder him? And, if the thing he's planning to do should be done, it shall be done, even though he doesn't do it. Somebody else may finish the job, but he will have the comfort of knowing that he helped put it acress. If there were no opposition, it would be a eure sign that the job isn't worth doing, because this would prove that everybody agreed about it; and what's the use of fighting for a thing that wio one opposes? A dammed stream increases its depth, It ceases to be a shallow thing, without power, The fact is that men deliberately dam streams ta produce power, A man, opposed, develops strength. He sees and feels and knows and be- comes a better man, A man who has dlways had his own way, withoyt op- position, develops into a snob, a bully, a weakling. Give me the man oe ta been dammed for -the "tha - quires symipathy, et strength of character and superiority of soul. . * * 1f you're "all balled up" and can't think straight, and if your ideas come slowly because your mind is tired of running on a single track-- put away the particular job that whosé life has cess and Montreal streets. <-Song service, 7.156 p.m. Preaching, 7.30 p.m. Subject: "The Glooms of Ge- henna'. Where is the fire prepared for the Devil and his angels? Will God have a purified and stainless world? There and other questions concerning 'Hell Fire" will be ans- wered by Evangelist Joyce on Sun- day night. Everybody welcome. St, James' Church; corner Union and Barrie streets.-~T. . Savary, rector, the. rectory, 152 Barrie street. 8 am. holy communion; 11 a.m., morning prayer and litany, sermon subject, "Prayer, Its Hind- rances." 3 p.m., Sunday school; 7 P.m., evening prayer and sermon, Preacher, Rev. R. A. Hiltz, M.A., D.C.L., general secretary, Gen. Board of Religious Education. troubles you, and tackle something elsel upon which your mind will work freely and spontaneously. . Let your mind work in thé path of least resistance--where you won't have to fight every step of the way. This isn't always the best thing to do, because the easy path breeds flabbiness--but if you've really done your level best, and your mind sim- ply will not do its work, it's better to let"up on the strain and come back when your mind is fresh and open. You can't do your best work with & closed mind, with wrinkles inside and outside. But the time that you spent puzzl- ing out the task ahead of you isn't lost, because you've started trains of thought in your sub-conscious mind which will find-¢heir destination, Your mind will work dn the night while you're asleep--it will marshall First Church of Christ, Scientist. ~=Johnson street, 'between Bagot and Wellington. Sunday €ehiool at 9.45 a.m, ; Sunday servige, 11 a.m., and 7 p.m. - Subject, "Substance." m 7.30" to 8.30 o'lock. All are cordiaMy invited to the services and to thereading-room. #2 fa - " d Sydenham" © Stréet™, Methodist Church..--~R. H, Bell, minister, 'will preach. 11 am, "Surrender in Prayer." Rev. Manson Doyle, secre- tary 'of Religious Bducation, The Methodist Churéh, will preach at 7 p.m. Social hour at the close. Bibles school, 2.45 p.m. ; classes: A. Shaw, 9.45; the pastor, 10.15. You are we!l- come to all. Easter Monday, April I%th. Con- cert In Sydenham street Methodist church. Artists: Edna Reed, trem- ulo, soprano; and Jean Chown, King- the facts and. array the jleas and form new combinations that will give you what you've been struggling for. And perhaps when you awake to- morrow morning and come back to the unfinished job you will put your finger on just the idea, just the word, to find or you today. * * » Every New Yorker has seen ferry- boats en the North and East Rivers swirling into thedr slips, after hay- ing strong currents. Instead of heading straight in, the pilot always takes his boat beyond the ferry slip because he knows that E experiment HE ston, contralto. Reserve the date, Charles Stelzle. 3 when the propellers are slowed down, the boat will be carried down stream instead of landing in the narrow strip. : To' those 'who "do not know about the current in the river, this seems like wasting time and effort, But this is precisely what every successful man is called upon to do in his struggle to win out. He must give more and work harder than merely enough to "get Lacross."" He must always allow for the margin-of waste and {neffective- {ness in every plan, You can't sit down and say that to build a house will cost so much-- and then lay aside just enough money to meet these expenses, If you're wise you'll add ten per cent. and prepare for the extras. Same way with running an auto- mobile. It always, costs more than the figures given you by the sales- man, When you buy five pounds of meat, you've got to think of the bones and fat you can't eat, but for which you'll pay. But it's especially in the bigger things of life that you'll have to think of the margins, There are al- ways extras about which you cannot know when you start out. And they arent always expressed in terms of cash--for poise, and de- cision, and cheerfulness, and mostly character_count for more than money, in 'putting things acroes." It's the man who is ready with the "extras" that lands fn the "slip" -- he doesn't have to waste time tryimg it over again because he failed in the first attempt. : * * » One morning the - suburbanites coming into a New Jersey railroad station were hit in the face by a big, red poster about ten by twenty-four feet in dimensions, advertising a staple product. This happened several weeks ago --and for a few days It made a no- ticeable dent on the minds of the travelers. Today it's part of the "landscape" nobody pays the slightest attention to it--although it's just as big and red as ever? How about you? There was a time when 'your little "stunt", made guite a hit--and you thought you wehd somebody in life's show, : But you've been doing the same thing too long, and people have got- ten used to you. : When it comes your '"'turn". they pay no attention, although you may be just as good as, but you should be better--and this means you must be different. I have a pretty strong conviction that a man should change his job at least once every ten years, He may work for the same con- cern, and he pv _ 40 the same gen- eral thing cif he does exactly the same th. in exactly the same way, ther 4's a sure sign that he's part of t's "landscape'--and mighty unin- just the plan that your mind refus~,{ forced their way against the | seresting landscape 2: that THE MAN ON WATCH 8t. Andrew's also out of work. * church "chimes are -- * Premier Drury ig not going to tigh- ten up the O. T. A. That is not ne- cessary. The O. T. A. looks just as shocking as a "tight man' as it fs. Straw hats on one end and golos- hés on the other make the girls look real funny in March, "The Board of Education. will not "Gee, I'd hate to have to T---- 5 en eT - ride much in 7 - this tub" : |secure ash trays for its smoking |members,, as the city council did. | The educationalists -do not permit smoking while-they are in sessionn, as the city fathers do. If that professor who went to Caledonia Mills, Nova Scotia, to solve the ghost scare could get a tank of Loughboro firewater, he would sce the same things those newspaper f.l- lows did. : That month of evangelistic ser- vices is blamed for squelching the Kingston election protest trial, One of Ontario's judges is unfor- tunate in "getting in bad' with his court audiences. While a judge must 'be strict, he should also be a merry fellow and not crusty. After all the people of this country are sovereign. 1 ----- > Why did Canada choose All Fools' the Irish Free State? The Lampmen would excuse the Irish Self-Deter= mination League of Kingston if it met and,passed an indignant rasolu- tion. Queen's hockey club should en- &age that mesmerist fellow to attend to its players. Apparently he could make them play - a game through without any training at all, by just telling them to go to it. Up on Alfred street the house- wives'are blamed for the unshoveMNed sidewalks this winter, as it is claim- ed they should not have allowed their husbands to become slovenly. -- ston's tax rate for this year may cause a surprise as it will not be nearly so high as the prophets have been predicting. wen Portsmouth is taking more inter- est in the Navy League since the flood of Tuesday, and is considering organizing a life saving crew and purchasing a punt. -- A certain Toronto newspaper is patting itself on the back because Margot Asquith, "the" woman with the serpent's tongue," picked its ar- ticle on herself as the best. But Mar- got chose the most flattering article, Just as any woman would. There are men who have won me- dale and men who have won honor- able mention, but there is another = DODD'S KIDNEY ~ RITE NG In/ Every Pa of Brock s Bits Seed Con- tains a Cake of Brock's Bird and be will sing the year round. Of course, Birds need proper care" as well as proper BROCK'S BIRD | Brock's Bird Book is the most author- itative | this dni on subject. It contains 228 tions. and 40 your address for {on cents, with a FREE PACKAGE of Bird aud a Cake of Brock's Bird Jee the BROCK day on which to formally recognize 'have endured | The Lampman is told that King-', Montreal, | NICHOLSON & 3 he NTO class of peopid 'who deserve to be! who! honored, and that is the class through this winter with no work, practically no sub- stance and accerted no aid, How they did it they alone know, They just en- dured and said nothing. To think of it must shame those with plenty and who never even enquire how their fellowmen are getting along or give more. than is squeezed out 'of them. The class alwaystgiving amd help- ing 1s "of the kingdom of heaven" and the other of the earth, ands very earthy at that. --THE TOWN WATCHMAN. ---------------- Charged With Fraud. ; March 11.--Warrants have been issued from the Montreal Strength-Civing Are the Effects You Naturally Want frem Your Spring Medicine And Hood's Sarsaparilla satisfies these needs as nothing else can. and bleod pyrifier has been recog- nized for nearly fifty years as the best spring medicine for restoring the blood and circulation to their natural richness and vitalMty. Hood's Sarsaparilla is more than This marvellous restorative tonie H birds. j court under instructions from department tor attorney-general's the arrest of Alphonse Desch Issdore Friedman, George Markel son and Samuel M. Smal, Nn York. Deschamps was proprietor the bankrupt brokerage firm of schamps and 'Company, which su ceeded Friedman Markelson an Company. 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