Ontario Community Newspapers

Daily British Whig (1850), 10 Nov 1923, p. 19

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¥ SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1023. THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG Glasses for Young and| 0ld The importance of perfect sight is all essential to young, middle aged and old. | Errors of refraction can be reme- | dies by Glasses especially made for | each particular case. { ) We are competent optometrists and | furnish right glasses for eyes needing assistance. R. ARTHEY, R0. VISION SPECIALIST | 1483 PRINCESS STRERT Phone 2108. Open evenings by appointment. : TORONTO n Centre Shoppi and Buginess District 250 | Sunday Services in Churches St. Paul's--Morning prayer, 11 o'clock, preacher, Canon FitzGerasd, M.A.; Sunday school, 3 p.m.; Even- ing prayer, 7 o'clock, preacher, Can- on FitzGerald, M.A, Bethel Church----Barrie and John. son streets----Pastor, A. Sidney Duu- can. Armistice celebrated 10.45 a. m. Please come early. Short thanksgiving service 7 p.m. St. Andrew's Presbyterian--Rev. Rev. John W. Stephen, minister. Ser- vices, 11 a.m. and 7 p.m., conducted by the minister. Students, soldiers and visitors cordially welcomed. W.C.T.U.--The regular meeing of the Women's Christian Temper- ance Union will be held in the Y. W.C.A. parlors, Johnson street, on Tuesday, Nov. 13th, at 3.30 p.m. All ladies welcome, Calvary Congregational Church-- Corner Charles and Bagot streets. Pastor, D. K. Faris, till further not- ice. Sunday, 11 a.m.; 3 p.m.; Sun- day school; 7 p.m.; Monday, 8 p. m.; Christian Endeavor, Wednesuay £8 p.m.; prayer meglio. Cooke's Church, Brock street-- Rev. T. J. S. Ferguson, minister. 11 a.m., Armistice service; 7 pun. Thanksgiving. This service will close at 7.60. 11 a.m., kindergarten Sun- day school; 3 p.m., Sunday school and Bible classes. Everybody wel- come. » Salvation Army Citadel--10.45 a.m., Armistice service. (Two min- utes silence at 11 am.) 3 p.m, Thanksgiving service; 7 p.m., salva- tion meeting. To be conducted by Ensign Porter. Monday, Nov. 12th. Thanksgiving programme by band and songsters. Keep Jack Frost Away WITH AN ELEC- 'TRIC HEATER Only the best in stock --Westinghouse, Ma- jestic, National, Equator. -- Sydenham Strect, R. H. Bell, min- {ister--11 a.m., sharp, Two Minutes Silence. Public worship, Preacher Rev. R. P. Mackay, D.D., secretary for missions, Presbyterian church. 7 pm., preacher, Rev, A. BH. Arm- strong, M.A., assistant-secretary. Us- ual social hour. Come and join us. -- Queen Street Methodist Church---- Special Thanksgiving services. The pastor will preach. 11 a.m., anthem, Gloria in C (Mozart); solo, Mrs. Crawford. 7 p.m., anthem, "Rejoice for Blessings Round Us Fall" (from Ruth"); male chorus, "Who Are These?" Sunday school and Bible classes at 3 pm. Seats free, and you will be welcomed. Brew a cup of Celery King | a *'ten"' of Nature'sown herbs and roots, ~~ the finest laxative and blood purifier you can get. It gent- ly cleanses the system of all im- urities, banishes headaches, ete. §0c and 0c packages, at druggists. |A Croupy Cough brings dread to the mother's heart. For safety's sake, keep a bottle of Shiloh, the old time remedy, at hand. A very few drops makes the easier atonce, and taken y Gives te relief. 0c, 60c $1.20. druggists. nn AGENCY FOR ALL OCEAN STEAMSHIP LINES * Special attention given your tami) or friends going to or returning Ron the Old Country, rts arranged 18 OUGHS For information and rates a t Jd. P. HANLEY, C.P. and ro 4 Ry., Kingston, Ont, alee, Sanadlan National Railway, corner Johnson and Ontario s Kingston, Ontario. oe, Open Day and Night. PHONE 99 or 1438. St. James' Church, cor. Union and Barrie streets--T. W. Savary, rector, The Rectory, 152 Barrie street. 8 am., Holy Communion; 10,45 a.m., Morning prayer wand sermon; Two minutes' silence at 11 8 p.m. Sunday School; 7 p.m. Even- ing prayer and sermon. Rev, W. BE. Taylor, M.A., Ph.D., Wycliffe College, Toropto, will preach av both services. St. ¢ 's Cathedral--Twenty- fourth Sunday after Trinity. Armis- tice Day. 8 a.m., holy communion; 10.45 a.m., specially arranged ser- vice for Armistice Day. Preacher, crores By the Rev. The other day a group of intelligent men--every one of them church men seriously debated the question: "Is there any further need for the church?" It is being said by honest students that the church is a failure, a waning pow- er, an effete institution. To be sure, men have always been criticising the church, prophesying that it has seen its best days and that he: fore long it will have suhk into obli- years younger, and. in fact, mad new man of me," is the precise state- ment made recently by Felix Nadeau, well-known contractor, 142 George Street, Ottawa, Ontario. "Hardly a day passed in fifteen years that stomach trouble did not keep me in misery, and pains in my back were so severe that at times I could not rise from my chair. the gight of food nauseated me, ner- voushess, loss of sleep and declining eight furth or undermined my -eon- "Taniac made me feel twenty-five | couraged ea the Dean. Service at 10.45 so that two minutes silence at 11 o'clock, can be observed. 3 p.m., Sunday schools; 4 p.m., holy baptism; 7 p.m., evensong. Preacher, Rey. W. E. Kidd. Monday, 10 a.m. holy communion. First Baptist Church, Sydenham and~Johnson streets--Rev, J. 8. La- Flair pastor. service in school room. 11 am., sermon theme, "World Peace," an Armistice day message. 2.45 Bible school. 7 p.m., sermon theme, "The Spirit of Thanksgiving, Servjces conducted by the pastor: Thanks- giving day, union service in Chal- mers church at 10.30 a.m. ' Christian Science, First Church of Christ Scjentist, 95 Johnson streot ~--Services, 11 a.m. and 7 p.m. Sub- ject, "Adam and Fallen Man." Wednesday, 8 Pp Mm. testi- monial meeting. Public reading room open every afternoon except Sundays and holidays from 3 to 5 p.m. and on Thursday evenings from 7.30 to 9.30 p.m. All are cordially invited to the services and to the reading room. -- Princess Street Methodist Church --Rev. John K. Curtis, B.A., minis- ter. Thanksgiving services morn- ing and evening. 11 a.m. '"The Duty and Joy of Thanksgiving." 7 p.m., An Armistice-Thanksgiving service--a tribute to those who won the war, and our gratitude for this and otherp mercies. Special music morning and evening. Primary dept. worships with the congregation at 10 to 11, Other Sunday school depts, 2.46 pm. Visitors cordially wel- comed. The morning service opens at 10 minutes to 11 o'clock to per- mit the silent tribute to the dead. St. Luke's Church, Nelson street-- Rev. J. dePencier Wright, rector. Twenty-fourth Sunday after Trinity. (Thanksgiving Sunday). 11 am, morning prayer. Music--Te Deum (Woodward), R. Alcorn and choir. Solo, "In Flanders Fields" (Deane- Wells), D. Couper. (2.30 p.m., Sun- day school and Bible classes; 4 p.m., holy baptism; 7 p.m., evening pray- er. Music--choral psalm. Magnifi- cat and Nunc Dimittis in G. (Maun- der), Mrs. A. Hinks and choir; an- them, "Great and Marvellous" (Turner) ; solo, "Consider the Lillies of the Fields" (Topliff), H. Birchall. Seats free. Strangers, students and visitors cordially welcome -- Chalmers, Barrie and Earl streets ----Services, 11 a.m. and 7 p,m. Sil- ence prayer for two minutes in the morning Rev, A. E. Armstrong, M.A., asst.-secy., F. M, Bd. In the evening, Rev. R. P. Mackay, D.D., secy. For. Mission Br. Prof. Mara. éson's student Bible class, 2 p.m. ; Prof. MacClement"s Young People's Bible class, 2 p.m. Sunday school, 3 pm! Monday, 10.30 a.m') " Chaimwe church, joint Thanksgiving service, Rev. J. K. Curtis, B.A., Princess Street Methodist church will preach. Rev. A. 8. Duncan and J, 8S. la- Flair will take part in the service. A liberal collection is asked in aid "of the Armenian sufferers. DO WE NEED THE CHURCH ? Clraries Stelzle. oe rx vion. Somehow, it has managed to survive in spite of those doleful pre- dictions. One of the hardest things in the world to kill is a church--an indi- vidual church. Ask a church extension ¢ committee which, for the time being, has resolved itself into a church "ex- tinction" committee. There's always a company of people who will hang on to the end, no matter what the eccles- iastical authorities may decree. - And Contractor Makes 16 Pound Gain On 1anlac Stitution, and I became utterly dis- "But two years ago the Tanlac treatment put me right on my feet, entirely relieving my stomach and nervous trouble, and increasing my weight sixteen pounds. Now, I sleep like a tired school boy, and can do a bigger day's work than ever before, 1 1 always praise Tanlac." Tanlag is for sale by all good drug- gists. Accept no substitute. Over 37 million bottles sold. yf Take Tanlac Vegetable Pills. 10.30 a.m., prayer | | "FREEZONE" | | CORNS Lift nght off | { | | | | Doesn't hurt a bit! Drop a little "Freezone" on an aching corn, in- stantly that corn stops hurting, then shortly you lift it right off with fing- ers. Truly! ~¥our druggist sells a tiny bottle of "Freezone" for a few cents, suffi- cient to remove every hard corn. soft corn, or corn between the toes, and the calluses without soreness or irri- tation. ' when outsiders attempt to kill the church, the efiorts of the insiders be- come all the more strenuous, But a church which has merely a narrow, selfish purpose cannot long survive as a useful organization. It will become a mere shell--without life or vitality. | Who cares whether such a church lives { or dies ? And who will assert that any- | body can secure any real satisfaction | from the maintenance of such as en- terprise?" ® There is one chiei reason why the | church continues to survive, aside from other reasons, namely man is "incurably religious." John Fiske, not a churchman nor a theologian, but one of the foremost scientific investi- gators, said of religion: "None can deny that it i3 the largest and most ubiquitous fact connected with the ex- istence of mankind." Professor James and desire to save this working man's soul from hel. The day, has gone by forever when the 'social spirit" of the church may be truly represented by an evang:list standing before a prison cell with a | basket of fodd, especially posed for the newspaper photographer. It is now a question of social and economic jus- tice--not charity. The working man | who hasn't had a square deal in indus- | trial life, and the child who has becn ground down in the scramble for wealth, should be given justice--noth- ing short of this, How this is to"be accomplished is a question for the eco- | nomists to determine. The church need not work. out the plan in detail. It must nevertheless speak in the tones of the prophets, definitely and concer- tely, against those who "sell the needy for a pair of shoes." The church must no longer protect those who are guilty of producing crippled workers. It must demand fairness and justice in indusgrial life. It must insist that the consciences of thc oppressors canuot be calmed by con- tr.buiicns toward charitable causes. WHY THE WEATHER? Secretary, American Meteorological Society, Tells How. The Pressure or Wing. The pressure of wind ~ as one feels it fanning the face or in the siruggle against the gale, increases in a ratio very much more rapa than the increase in miles per hour, Mathematically it is reckoned in ratio of the square of velocity. For example, the pressure exerted by a 10 milg breeze as compared with a 60 mile gale is not as 16, to 50 su as 100 to 2,500, which are the {Squares of the velocities. Thus, =m breasting a gale a person receives 25 times as.great an impact as that of a 10 mile breeze which is suffic- has a thick volume on "The Varieties of Religious Experience." y But here is an important fact in this 'pole, ient to snap out a flag flying from a The pressure of a 10 mile breeze connection: Religion is life. It isn't manufactured by priests and ministers. It is born in the hearts of men. Now life produces organisms. There is no | life anywhere without organization. | The inorganic is the lifeless Sometimes men say: "I believe in religion, but I don't. believe in the church." You cannot have real relig- | ion without organization. Not neces- | sarily the form of organization that | we find in the church today but some | kind of organization must result from | religion. For true religion is a social | force; no man can be religious alone, | There must be a God and a neighbor. Now the church is man's: expression of his religious life and instincts. It is the organization which hé bas formed to permit him to serve best. For true religion means service. When the church ceases to serve then it will un- doubtedly be superseded by some oth- er religious orgamization, or at least one with the religious motive. The success of the church is not in- dicated by its great wealth. Sometimes the great wealth of the church is a ser- ious embarrassment. It is more im- portant for the church to win the me- chanic than the millionaire. A high Church once remarked: "We can no longer say with Saint Peter, 'Silver and gold have I none." "True," was the reply; "neither can you say, 'Take up thy bed and walk" Neither is the success of the church gauged by its enormous membership. The real character of the church is de- termined by the quality of its mem- bership. Are these people like the mas- ter whom they profess to serve? Are they actually carrying out the will of God for the redemption of the world? A handful of disciples, true to Christ's | principles, "turned the world upside "down." Are the millions upon mil- lions of church members fulfilling their tasks to the same degree? Does any- body imagine that they are doing it even to a fraction of the devotion found in these pioneers? Frankly, if the men in the churches of America were to determine that the evil in their cities must go--what and who could stand in their way? Let me repeat, the church, in order to make good must direct religion | that it will be of social value. It is the business of the church to save the world--not itself. The church is sim- ply a means to an end and not an end in-itself. < It is not the business of the church to advocate any particular social sys- tem. The church is to preach the fun- damental principles of Jesus Christ, but it must apply these principles usly and specially to the great asking the church to It will not suffice to at ordinary air density is only 0.36 rounds to the square foot, while that of the strong gale is nearly 10 pounds. The average adult, garb- ed for out-of-doors when a gale is blowing, presents a considerable area lo its violence, and a great force smites him. No wonder the natural impulse is to turn the shoulder to the blast and reduce the area against which the pressure can dct. Wind pressure also varves vith the nature of the air itself; the icy gale of winter is heavier ang exerts a greater force than ome of equal velocity in summer. cough that (a SCOTTS NEIL] at all dealers. are fresh fruit juices combined with tonics into the finest remedy for stomach, liver, kidney, and skin troubles. 25¢. and 50c. a box-- FRUIT-A-TIVES LIMITED, Ottaws, Ont. so much medicine cabinet. apply at once r Rr. z when you have ABSORBINE JR. handy in the If the younger Children develop Toothache, Ear-ache or Sore Throat in the night, a little ABSORBINE JR. will soothe and relieve and send the sufferer off to sleep. If accidents happen--a cut finger; burnt hand, sprained ankle, bruised arm, wrenched shoulder or bleeding cut-- ACI It prevents infection, soothes the pain, starts healthy healing, and is a dependable "first aid" for any injury. It does not grease or stain bandages--has a clean, aromatic odor that freshens up a sick room. $1.25 a bottlg at most druggists or sent postpaid by W. F. YOUNG INC. Jo N = Lyman Building, Montreal 100 Heard a Good Lecture. Louise School and Home Club held its regular monthly meeting in the school, Thursday evening, Nov. Sth, at eight o'clock, with a very, good attendance of parents and teachers. The president, Mrs. A. W. Richard- son, was in the chair. After the business of the club was transacted Mrs. Richardson introduced Dr. Lake who had kindly consendéed to give a talk on the Rideau River showing by lantern slides the many beautiful places between Ottawa and Kingston. The lecture was much appreciated and the only regret was that more parents were not present. After this efreshments were served by the convenor and her assistants. The meeting closed by singing "God Have the King." N The man without other resources may be fiourishing with what the thinks is good advice, In extraordinary events ignorance of their cause produces mstonish- ment, Notes from Pittsferry. Pittsferry, Nov 7.--The rains were welcomed by everyone as they were greatly needed. John L. Me Master Jost a valuable horse this week. Mr. and Mrs. John Reid, Athens, spent. a few days this week with their daughter, Mrs. Gordon Mo adden. Mr. and Mrs, Wm. Graham and daughter, Doris, motor- ed from Enterprise and spent the week-end with Mr. and Mrs. B Orr and relatives here. Mrs. Wm, Me- Master is with her daughter, Mrs, H. MeCormick, Point Road, who is fll. A number from here shipped fowl to Montreal this week. Miss Han- nah Orr, Simcoe Island, is visiting with her cousin, Miss Elva Orr. Nothing is so contagious as ex- ample and we never do any great good or great evil which does not produce its like. ¥ Absence of occupation is not rest, A mind quite vacant is a mind distressed.--Cowper, to \ Bread. ry Kingston, Nov. 10th, 1923. » To the People of Kingston and Vicinity Our thanks to you for having made our Bread Sales the biggest in the history of DOYLE'S BAKERY. Price cutting introductory offers and other induce- ments have failed to effect on total sales for fiscal year just ended, Oct. 3 lst, said sales being greater than ever before Commanding a Broader field than other Bread, the MILK MAID LOAF has adequately filled the require- ments of more discriminating housewives than any other " It being more generally accepted that' Quality, uni- formly maintained, is always worth the price. The consequent steady improvement in the quality of DOYLE'S BREAD is bound to effect a still sumption of our product. greater con- Fos As a fitting acknowledgement of your loyal support we renew our pledge to zealousyswatch over every pro- cess which goes to make DOYLE'S BREAD the Bread of Quality. 'We beg to remain, Yours very truly,

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