Ontario Community Newspapers

Daily British Whig (1850), 22 Mar 1922, p. 3

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 22, 1922, -- THE DAILY _ BRITISH WHIG. MARCH CHAPS . .Our Super-Borated Cream of Witch Hazel is the most sooth. ing and healing preparation of its kind, , A few applications will work wonders on rough, chapped hands or face, splendid shape t In large bottles L. T. BEST Dispensing Druggist i and efficiently, desired. uncommon words-- maybe, but very common causes of HEADACHE We have glassss that remove these, causes and give IMMEDIATE RELIEF Before. consulting the physi- cian, before using medicines' and drugs, come and see us. It your headache is caused by eye strain we cure it THROUGH PROPER c Smith KING STREET REPAIRS Our Repair Department is in repairs to either Watches, Clocks, Jewelry or Spectacles promptly We have an excellent staff of watchmakers, capable of repairing the highest grades of Watches. We are glad at any time to give estimates and designs on any re- modeling of Jewelry or new work Jewelers (Limited) Established 1840. ee e-- o look after any Bros. KINGSTON GLASSES Keeley Jr., M.0.D.0. Optometrist and Optician, 226 Princess Street. 8 doors above the Opera House vice--actual business growth is the reward of merchants who tell their news story to our readers, A gift horse should not be looked in she mouth, OA 2 SPECIAL A "De Luxe" Electric Iron™. .. .$3.50 A "De Luxe" Electric Toaster . $3.50 The "De Luxe" Iron and Toaster is made by the Radiant Electric Co. It has tl.e Hydro Electric approval. PAINTING TIME A coat of Paint will cover up all - the worn places and make your home look bright and clean for Spring. Buy B. and H. English Paint. The quality is unquestioned, McKelvey & Birch, Limited » Steam Fitters and Plumbers, Jobbers of Plumbers' snd Gas-Fitters' Supplies, Stoves, Shelf, Heavy and House Furnighing Hardware, Tools, Olle, Beat Supplies, Sheet Metal and Tin Work. Special Work of all Kinds Undertaken, RT 5 Ss Es SE E E EE & & uw Es Eg = Eg g 2 = sc s ] gE S 2) E EE A = Eo] E 28 E ES E22] 5 5 ss m 2 5 Es = :s iu sc E& : 2 Er rd ---------- It Beats---As It Sweeps------As It Cleaiis Are you tired at the end of sweeping day? It is no wonder that such effort saps your energy. Ale Lo We have a remedy--one that will re- lieve you of effort and clean your Rugs bet- ter than you could possibly Ah it. FREE demonstration either . in your home or in our store. : 3 I.E. Harrison Co., Limited Piose 90 OUR advertisers get a definite ser-| || SLANG NOT ALWAYS AID TO PROMOTION | | St If you are president of the concern | for which you work or a leader in i your set in society you may with im- punity punctuate your conversation with as much slang as you choose | But then persons who have reached the top rungs of business or society can afford to do a good many things {that would mean ruin to those who are still climbing. The woman whose place in any social set is known--the member of an old established family, for Instance._may dress with a loud- ness that would brand a newcomer as "impossible." In a business office the president of the concern may dress with a carelessness that would mean loss of position for a newly em- ployed office boy. And so it is with slang. Many wel] bred persons use it in moderation and in excess. But for the young man or woman whose success in life is: still to be made to use slang mayshe a real handicap. A young women arrives in a small community and some neighborly neighbor calls on her, and the new- that although she thought , the "'burg" she had come to Was perfect- ly "ripping," she-was so "darn"d | lonesome that she thought she would | "croak." Not a "dame" had been to see her, and it would have been 'back to home and mother" for her il the good neighbor hadn't been "white' enough to "give her the glad hand." And the kindly neighbor, though she likes the newcomer's ap- pearance, is immediately prejudiced against her, To be sure, the daugh- ter of one of the "oldest inhabitants" of the town uses just as much slang, but then people make allowance for her. For a newcomer to do it seems like something of an effrontery, and when the neighborly neighbor who has called is asked how she likes the new-comer she does not pass along those words of enthusiasm that will' make the lonely newcomer sought after by the other "dames" in the "burg." So the young woman in the office who addresses the office boys with "Say, kid," begins her remarks to the other stenographers with "Listen here, Dearie," and refers to her em- ployer as 'one of the skickest bosses she ever had," although she may be winning for herself the reputation of being a jolly sort of girl, isn't put- ting herself in line for promotion to the position of that "boss's" private secretary, Premier King expects to arrive in Toronto on Thursday with the body of his brother. The four-power treaty will carry in the United States senate, comer greets her with the remark | [laters to the Editor] The Lord's Second Coming. Kingston, March .22.__(To the Editor): Would it not seem as | though the Methodist Ministerial Association of Toronto, in placing it- self on record as believing ff "the in- spiration and Divine authority of the | Holy Scriptures,' while denying "the { hope of the triumph of righteousness {on a visible return.of our Saviour | | accompanied by angelic armies,' has | placed itself in a somewhat anomal- | | ous position? | There surely can be but one sense | | in which we can look for "that bless- | | ed hope, and the glorious appearing | {of our God and Savious Jesus | | Christ," the sense stated by the amn- | | gels at His ascension, "This same | Jesus which ye have seen go into | heaven shall so come in like manner | as ye have seen Him go into heaven," | literally, bodily, really. If words | mean anything, there could be no i other sense, | Our Lord's own statements on the | subject must be taken as absolutely | | true, or we are driven to take issue | | with false teachers who claim! that | | "the Lord Himself as well as the | | apostles were men carried away by | | the popular Jewish hope of a coming | | Messiah and were entirely mistaken | | |in their false hope." { What said the Lord? ". lis Father with His angels." "The Son | Man shall come in the glory of | "Then | shall they see the Son of Man coming | {in a cloud with power glory." and great | | That His coming was not to be! lunderstood in a spiritual sense as re- ferring to thé coming of the Spirit at | from frequent Pentecost is evident future hope | references to the ! Paul's {cost and to his statement: "The Lord | Himself (not His | scend from heaven with a shout, in | epistles written after Pente- | Spirit) shall de-! with | Ithe voice of the archangel and with | as well as from j the ttrump of God"; "1 saw |John's revelation: heaven | opened and behold a white horse and | He that | Faithful and True \ sat upon him was called | . and the HN armies which were in heaven follow- | ed him. He shall smite' all nations with a rod of iron." How the proféssing church can al- low itself to be betrayed into such a false position in view of the Divine- ly authoritative Scriptures is incom- prehensible to many. God's purpose for the age is clear- ly set forth in Acts 15: "God at first | did visit the Gentiles (not to convert them all nor to millenialise the age) but to take out of them a people for | His Name as it is written: "After { which I.will return and will build jagain . . . .. { nacle of David) and I will set it up: the ruins (of the taber- | {that the residue of men might seek | |after the Lord." Has the church, weary of waiting | {for the fulfilment of the promise. for- | {gotten that He once spoke a parable {to them "'because they thought that | the kingdom of heaven would im- mediately appear" that in the par- | able of the talents He taught that it jrontd be "after a long time that the | Lord of the servants would return," {that in the parable of The Virgins it was because the bridegroom "tar- ried" that they "slumbered and | | { { | slept." while in the parable of the | | householder the very reason given | | | tor thelr lack of faithfulness was *be- | | cause my Lord delayed His coming?' "Unto them that shall He appear a second time." look for Him, | Any lawyer who would interpret | | these words of Paul as meaning that His first appearance was literal and | sonal but His second would be mere- ly a condition of. things, would be laughed out of court, What a hopeless hope is set forth by the Assoctation--the hope of "learning the whole world with gos- pel," when after twenty centuries of gospel teaching not one country, city, town or hamlet and hardly a family can be found where all have been re- generated by the gospel. --BERTHA CARR-HARRIS. Winter Still With Us. Winter is still with us, and citi- zens who were predicting an early spring are now ready to bet that cold weather will prevail for the rest of the month. It will be recalled that March came in like a lamb, so foi- lowing out the old adage, this means that it will go out like a lon. King- on Tuesday night. Rudolphe Ouimet, Liberal, gets clamation. Hood's = Pills Do not gripe or cause sain. Purely vegeta- sia, angy to take. 250. The Spring's newest shoe for men is a Brown Calf Bal, strap across the bal and small perforations made on the new square toe last. Ourprice ........: . a $9.00 Other Spring styles at $8.00 and down to $6. You can save from $1 to $3 by walking around JACK JOHNSTON SHOES STORE Phone 231]. "70 Brock Street ston had another light fall of snow | the Vaudreuil-Soulanges seat by ac- | physical and that His second would | be spiritual, that His first was per-' § 5 PROBS: --Thursday, fine and becoming milder. ° | bi P= [ o ao THURSDAY | At Steacy's Sensational ~ Madein Canada SALE All previously advertised bargains are on sale until sold up. See our windows and watch this space daily, New Silk Sweaters Regular $16.50 values Sale $ . Price 9 * 75 60 new Silk Sweaters, procured for this great sale from a well-known manufacturer of high-grade knit goods. The colors are Black, Navy and White; in sizes 36, 38, 40 and 42. This should prove a most wonderful bargain op- portunity. Sale Price $9.75 MEN'S FORSYTHE SHIRTS, $1.49 - 240 new Spring Negligee Shirts with French Cuffs-- in a broad range of attractive new patterns--a regular $2.00 vale ...... ...~.. «evr... Sale Price $1.49 a MEN'S MERINO COMBINATIONS, $1.29 60 only, Suits of Merino Combinations--in a nice, medium Spring weight; the sizes are 34 to 44, and sold regular at $2.00 each > . . .. Sale Price $1.29 WOMEN'S LISLE STOCKINGS, 39c. PAIR-- 600 pairs of fine Lisle Hose, in colors Black, Brown and . White; Penman brand; a splendid value at the regular price of 50c. pair. While this limited quantity lasts, get your present and future requirements . ........ Sale Price 39c¢. MONARCH SILK STOCKINGS, $1.39 25 dozen Thread Silk Stockings with elastic lisle ribbed tops. The colors are Black, Brown, Navy and. White: in sizes 8} to 10. Regular $2.00 values. . . . . Sale Price $1.39 LADIES' UMBRELLAS, $1.59 120 strong, Jap. framed, Showerproof Topped Umbrellas, with tape edges--a large range of novelty handles to choose from. Reg. $2.25 values, as a special attraction-- Sale Price . .... ... $1.59 WINDOW SHADES, $1.19 - 120 plain Green and Cream Oil Shades -- great value at $1.50 each. While they last, your choice Sale Price $1.19 Come to-morrow and visit this great Made-in-Canada ex- hibition and sale. We planned for weeks to make this great sal: the success it has proved. : s. WE DID 'NOT plan it overnight, as this genuine Made-in- Canada Sale will prove most conclusively to you. or \ A \ Steacy's - Limited Has rs oma

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy