Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Daily Times, 13 Jul 1929, p. 13

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

i United Church | Tg ee a zetep, RNC} 19 Wing £. Church---Telephone 2287 (SUNDAY, JULY 14 fi1 AM. --"Christ's Teaching of Happiness"; 2nd of series on 'Sermon on the Mount." [2 AM.--Sunday School and Bible Classes. Evening Service P.M.--"The Principle of Unused Power." The Pastor Will Preach at Both Services LBERT ST. UNITED CHURCH REV. R. A. 11 A. M, ev. E. A. Tonkin, of Bowmanville, will preach 7PM, Miss Pearl Fletcher will have charge of the even- ing service Everybody welcome! WHATTAM Wesleyan Tabernacle LARGE GOSPEL TENT Corner of Metcalfe and Centre Streets Services: Sunday 10.30 a.m.--Prayer and Praise. 11 am, 3.00 and 7.00 p.m.--P Each evening except Saturday at 8 o'clock Do not fail to hear Evangelist E. J. Wilson, who is ably assisted by Miss Effie See and Miss Evangeline Warren, deaconesses, and Mr. Barclar Warren, as selo- ist and song leader. We emphasize the doctrines of early Methodism, and are in no way connected with any other body of people who have worshipped on these grounds. A CORDIAL INVITATION TO ALL OF CANADA Over Arcade Pastor: Rev. E. R. Orger. Sunday, July 14 p. m. -- Evangelistic Service. thursday 8 p.m.--Prayer eeting. 'Come and We Will Do Thee Good." entre Street UNITED CHURCH BV. W. P. FLETCHER, B.A, D.D, 10 a.m.--Sunday School. 11 a.m.--Rev, S. A, Law- in, Ph.B.,, Sect. Lord's ay Alliance. + 7 pm.--"Is Your Christ- nity Worth Anything?" Mon. 8 p. m, -- Young pople's. lt ------ lalvary Baptist Church Athol St., Near Simcoe sv. H. A. Ackland, Minister 10 a.m.~~Bible School. 11 a.m.~--~"The Boy Who id His Birthright", 7 p. m.--*Religious wision" gr gr 'ayer an al tarly Business Meeting. Friday, 8 p. m.=--Choir shearsal, rerybody Heartily Invited In. Da a i === St George's ANGLICAN ir. Bagot and Centre Sts. ANON C. R, dePENCIER, M. A. 39 Athol Street West foly Communion--8 a.m. 1 a.m.~Moraing Prayer Sunday School Centre St.«~2.30 p.m. 7 p.m.--Evensong. jptisms 2nd Sunday each onth. The Salvation Army Simcoe and Oak Streets ENSIGN AND MRS. A. DIXON, Commanding Officers 11 am.--'Nehustan." 3 pm, -- Band program at Lake. { 7 pm, -- 'Three Great Words." Sunday School--10 a.m. and 2 p.m, DRIFTWOOD MENACE NEW YORK HARBOR Propellor Broken By Float- ing Timber Handicap To Navigation New York--The vast amount of driftwood and other obstacles in New York harbor constitutes a ser- ious handicap to navigation and imposes a heavy financial penalty on boat owners, according to a re- port made public by Edwin B. Lapham, vice-president of the Waterway League of America. In the first five months of the year, the report said, members of the New York tow-boat exchange paid out $40,000 for new propel- lers and the- cost of fitting them after old ones had been damaged by the drifting debris. But that figure does not begin to approxi- mate the total cost of accidents, Lapham pointed out, because some mishaps have been so serious that boats have been required to go to drydock, owners thus losing the services of the vessels. Floating and submerged timbers are such a menace in slips that some coastwise steamers are tow- ed out beyond the pierhead before the engines are started. Yachtsmen, with their lighter craft, are among the heaviest suf- ferers. One yachtsman in a single season had 22 accidents to propel- lers in Hell Gate and East River. Another had seven accidents--one daily--in a week, All pleasure boat owners within a 20-mile radius of New York's city hall are affected by the floating debris, Lapham said, with night-sailing all but eli- minated because of the danger. The Waterway League's Aids to Navigation Committee has made a study of the problem and con- cluded that most of the drift mat- erial comes from four sources. One of these is the boat "'grave- yard," where several thousand hulls and parts of hulls have been left to the elements, Each winter these ship skeletons are broken up by the ice floas and the wreckage is forced into harbor channels. Another . source is the long, rotted pile, which has slipped its pier, dock, jetty or bulkhead. The latter are not kept in proper con- dition and replacements have not been made promptly. The Waterway League plans legal action by fedefal state and local authorities against owners of vessels and' piers which contribute - tp-- lo the navigation meyace, | services THE OSHAWA DAILY, TIMES, SATURDAY, JULY, 13, T929'\ Services in the City Churches HB » City C Churches ANDREW'S AND SIMOON moins of Bt. An- a and Simcoe street United churches, which are holding union 'during - 'the summer months, will worship tomorrow tn Simcoe street church. In the morn. ing, Rev, Ernest Harston, pastor of Simcoe street church, will preach on "The Tonic Quality of Spirit," and in the evening Rev. C. D. Dan- fel of Sunderland will preach on "A Message by the Way." KING STREET CHURCH Rev. C. B. Cragg, pastor of King street United church, will tomor- row morning give the second of a geries of sermons founded on the Sermeén on the Mount, the subject being "Christ's Teaching of Happt- ness." His evening service will be "The Principle of Unused Power." KNOX CHURCH At Knox Presbyterian churen tomorrow the pastor, Rev. Duncan Munroe, will preach both morning and evening. His subject at the morning service will be "Herod" and at the evening service 'The Master's Yoke." FIRST BAPTIST Rev, F. A. Lawson, of Toronto, will be the special speaker at the evening service in First Baptist church tomorrow. In the morn- ing, the pastor, Rev. John Galt, will preach on "A Seasonable Mes sage." The annual Sunday school picnic will be held during tne week, ST. GEORGE'S CHURCH The usual service will be held at St. George's Anglican church to- morrow, with the rector, Rev. Can- on' DePencier, in charge. Holy Communion will be administered at 8 am, with morning prayer at 11 o'clogk and evensong at 7 o'clock. NORTH SIMCOE CHURCH Rev. A. Mansell Irwin, the pas- tor, will have charge of the ser- vices of North Simcoe United church tomorrow. The usual ser. vices will be heid at 11 and o'clock. OHRIST CHURCH Rev. H. A. Meek, of West Hill, will be in charge of the sérvices at Christ Church, Anglican, tomor- row, with Holy Communion at 11 o'clock and evemsong at 7 o'clock. HOLY TRINITY Usual services will be held at Holy Trinity Chyrch tomorrow, with the rector, Rev, S. C. Jarrett, ™ charge. Holy Communion will be administered at 8 o'clock, with matins and sermon at 11 o'clock and evensong and sermon at 7 o'clock, PENTECOSTAL CHURCH The Oshawa Pentecostal Holi- ness Church will hold its first ser- vices on Sunday since its affilia- tion with the Pentecostal Holiness Church of Canada. This was for merly known as the Oshawa Pente- costal Tabernacle. W. Légge, of Toronto, will speak at the evening service. WESLEYAN TABERNACLE Evangelistic services will be held all next week at the tent at Centre and Metcalf streets by the Wesleyan Tabernacle. Evangelist E. J. Wilson {ig in charge, sted by Misses Effie See and Evangeline Warren, deaconness, and Barclay Warren, soloist and song leader. SALVATION ARMY Ensign and Mrs. A. Dixon will have charge of the services at the Salvation Army citadel tomorrow. In the morning the subject will be "Nehushtan" and in the evening "Three Great Words." A band program will be presented at Lake- view Park at three o'clock tomor- row afternoon. ALBERT STREET CHURKUN Rev. E. A, Tonkin of Bowman- ville will have charge of the morn- ing service at Albert street United church tomorrow. At the evening service, Miss Pearl Flétcher of this city will give an address. Material Possibilities Are Stressed Too Easily A Canadian visitor in England heard a man lecture on Canada. For nearly two hours he tola of the wonderful possibilities open to men of energy and enterprise. He showed his views of long stretches of wheat lands and orchards amaz- ingly rich in fruit. He told of men who had started with little or noth- ing, and in less than 20 years had ended and people left to think ever t all, one man said: "Did you no- tice that he talked about nothing else but money, His whole theme was how people could get rich. Other aspects of life evidently make no appeal to him apd he does not seem to think that they could appeal to other people, That was the reaction of a man who felt that life held other in- terests than those of mere money- making. When people change their place of dwelling it is amazing to find how little consideration has been given to the religious advan- tages or disadvantages involved. What does Paul call the tempo of God, and if we defiile this tem- ple, what is the result? Answer, read--I Cor. 3:16, 17. What did Jesus say about the woman who anointed his head witn precious ointment? Answer, read --Matt. 26:6-13. : What did Jesus say about little children? Answer, read--Matt. 19 113-15. i in | TL + thot, DL grown rich. When the lecture wus |°0 Dr. W. M. Clow, principal-emeri- tus of the United Free Church Col- lege, Glasgow, Scotland, begins a disseration on the Christian gospel |. with these striking paragraphs: '"The word gospel, so full of mu- sic to the ear, means literally tne God-story, It is the declaration of the love and grace of God in Christ, whether in the pages of the four records of His life, or on the lips of an evangelist, or in the reason- ed presentation of. its truths and imperatives by a master of its wis- dom, Its controlling purpose ru lead the soul into and through an experience in which there is deliv- erance from the guilt and power of sin, issuing in a life of truth and love like to that of its Lord, But white this summary may be accept- ed as broadly true, the message of the gospel must always pass through an individual interperta- tion. "Every man is as distinctive In the features of his spirit as in the features of his face. We differ in our temperament and training and knowledge and inheritance and, what is stil more determining, in our past. All we can say is that there are some to whom we are spiritually akin. But the questtun which presents itself to every man is 'What does the gospel mean, In Gospel Must be Expressed As Confession by Christians its vital truths, to me?' An honest |man sssoc answer, whatever may be its form, is always a confession, One answer, to which multi- tudes have given assent, has been set in words which surge with feel- ing. "I am crucified with Cheist; nevertheless I live; yet mot I, but Christ liveth in me and the. fain of the Son of God, who loved me and gave himself for me." The fiery-hearted young Jew who made this answer, pulsing with ap intense devotjon to his race and its faith, swelling with a fury of revulsiog against those who assailed its idéals and its su- macy, came to an hour when e died, Btephen's apology, Ste- phen's witneis, ' Stephen's shining face, Stephen's upward look, were the nails which fastened Saul of Tarsus to his cross. The following days of his initial experience were simply the first period of his dy- ing. As his last anguished breath was drawn, he looked upon nu spiritual face, now still in death, and he saw the man he had been --*"a. persecuter, a blasphemer, a wanton aggressor"--and he shud- dered at the sight. With due re- gard to differing circumstances, that is for many the first act fn the drama of salvation threugh the gospel, Dr. John Kelman of Scotlana, lately deceased, is the subject of an appreciation from a Methodist |¢ source. It must be nearly 25 years since I heard and met the late Dr. John Kelman first. It was the last ser- vice--the last of five--I had at- tended that memorable Sundey when I found myself in Edinburgh for the first time, Dr. Whyte in Free St. George's, Principal Rainy in the afternoen, George Jackson at the Mission, and the prayer meeting at Nicholson square, and as I walked towards the Carlton hill I saw that a lecture--a lec- ture, mind, and on poetry--was to be given in a certain church at pine that night by Rev. John Keélman. I went. For over an hour I sat among 200 eager Scottish youths and maidens, each armed with a copy of Robert Browning's works, and listened while a tense-faced, alert young minister expounded the meaning of "Bishop Blough- ram's Apology." The following morning ¥ spent in the preacher's study, and came actually, as so many have through print, under the gentle spell of the man who in so many ways received Henry Drummond's Mantle Fell on Late John Kelman on his shoulders the mantle ot eary Drummond. Few leaders of thought I have ever talked with in the last thirty years displayed so much intuition and sympathetic understanding of the aching probe lems life today sets us, joined witn such radiant convietion 'of their su- lution in the message and power of Jesus. They were the days of my own thraldom to the works of the great novelists, poets and es sayists of the just-closing Victorian era, and I was impatient of mere- ly clerical and theological keys to the mystery of life. Here was an man steeped in George Eliot and Carlyle, Browning and Stevenson, and all that glorious company' of the 19th century prophets, who still found in the Goppel of the New Testament the magic seasame to all doors, and the secret of romantic living. After a few letters I heard little of him again till the never- to-be-forgotten stay in the Isle of Wight, when I opened and gulped at almost a sitting the "Faith of {Robert Louis Stevenson." Now he has gone, worn out by war work and consuming advocacy of his Lord! Glorious knight-errant of God! PENTEGOSTAL GHURCH UNITES WITH LARGER BODY Celina St. Tabernacle Merges With Pentecostal Holiness Church of Canada Last Saturday the congregafivn of the Celina Street Pentecostal Tabernacle united herself and be- came identified with the Pentecos- tal Holiness Church of Canada. This church is a duly chartered body, holding both federal and pro- vincial charters, and is comprised of several bodies of Christain peo- ple in a number of localities. To- ronto is the headquarters with Rev. Edw. D. Reeves as superin- tendent for the Ontario conference, and Rev. A. Noseworthy of Mount Dennis, secretary. The fusion took place at the camp meeting just closed, held us Markham, and was the outcome of several business meetings held at Oshawa at the time of the cam- paign held here and led by Rev. J. W. Vaughn from North Caro- lina. The Oshawa congregation, being Fundamentalist, has seen fit to be affiliated with a chartered movement of kindred convictions and as the local officers are well acquainted with the tenets and doctrines of the Pentecostal Holiness Church as well as with its leaders the union was decided up- One of the first results will be the supply of speakers from other cities in addition to the local lead- ers. There is a large field to draw upon, as besides the Canadwmun branch, the Pentecostal Holiness Church is widely entrenched through most of the United States. Apart from the home work, foreign missionary efforts are carried on in South Africa, South China and North India. The local officers are: . J. W. Minns, 305 Celina Street, treasur- er; M. Boynton, 11 Fairbank Street; song leader, J. J. Mever, 202 Ritson Road South, local preacher and secretary. SUNSPOTS AND BIRDS A record kept at Montdidier, France, 1784-1896, of dates of ar- rival of birds and rainfall reveals a marked relationship to sunspot variation, according to investiga- tions made at the Dominion Obser- vatory, Ottawa. For instance, the cuckoo on the average arrived two weeks later at sunspot maximum ZIONISTS MEET AT ZURICH FOR 6TH CONGRESS Ratification of Constitution for Reformed Jewish Agency Comes Up Paris--The Sixteenth Zionist Congress which will begin its ses- sions in Zurich on July 28, will find the Zionist organization in a stronger position and Palestine in a more encouraging condition as the extension of the Jewish agency to include Zionists and non-Zien- ists is at hand. This optimistic note was sound- ed in a statement issued here by Dr. Chaim Weiamann, president of the World Zionist organization, en the eve of the biennial internation. al Zionist conference. The president of the World Zionist organization appeals to his fellow-Zionists to consider the se- rious problems confronting the movement in Palestine and' gives an outline of the tasks facing the movement and the country as the efforts for its rebuilding have en- tered a new phase: Features Of Pact The proposed constitution for the extended Jewish agency will pe laid before the congress for ratifi- cation. Features of the agreement are: That the extended Jewish agency discharge the function of the Jew- ish agency as Article IV of the Palestine mandate defines and use its best endeavors to insure the re- alization of the following funda. mental aims: (a) The encouragement and fur- therance of Jewish immigration to Palestine. (b) The fostering of the Hebrew national property of the Jewish people. (d) The employment of Jewish labor in all undertakings under the auspices of the Jewish Agency, the promotion of agricultural col- onization based om Jewish labor and giving the settlers freedom of choice as to the social form of the settlements as long as the require- ments of economic efficiency are satisfied. £750,000 Budget After the ratification of the con stitution for the Jewish Agency, the Zionist Congress will have to consider, or a minimum budget of £750,000 budget annually for the two ensuing years. 'This budget is to include provisions fer an in- creased immigration and' coloniza- tion work. It will not include the income of the Koran Kayomath. . It is reasonable ta hone that he- love of God should be supreme in True Friendship (From The Christi $ Chistian Science No word Manito assassin 0x presses the highest and best in hu- than the word "friend." A true friend is mother to .the motherless, father to the fatherless, and brother and sister to these who are without kin, To reach its fullest expression and its highest use, .- friendship must be twofold: it must give, and it must réceive. Mutual interests draw and hold' friends together. It may be that 'they have a. common love for beauty, or. devotion and econsecra- tion to the same worthy cause. Thue interests are of immeasur- able value and add greatly to the joy and benefits of friendship. But friendship must have a higher, a more enduring foundation than these human bends. Verily, the only lasting foundation for friend- ship, and the only enduring attrac tion, is the love of Gbd, divine Love. One can be a true friend to man- kind only as he reflects Godlike qualities, for these alone enable him to give to mankind the gift of friendship. Christ Jesus was the truest friend Dbumanity ever had. He called His digeiples 'friends'; but more than this, He said, "Who- soever shall do the will of God, the same {is my brother, and my sister, and mother." Jesus was a ténder, compassionate friend, ever ready to relieve sorrow and suffer- ing. He was a faithful friend, alert: to _protect and rightly to guide a friend. The oondition upon which He based the privilege of friendship with Him was that the the lives of those who sought His friendship. To this rule He made no exception, always insisting that is friends seek God above all olse, and love their neighbor as themselves. HUMANITARIANISY 1S ESSENTIAL SATS RED GROSS NURSE Says Public Health Nurse Is Backbone of Preventive Medicine Montreal, Que, July 13.--The es- sential feature of modern civilization is humanitarianism, according to Dr. 1. L. Bi igaar, National Commissioner of the Canadian Red Cross Society, who yesterday defined the close rela- tionship between: civilization and health in an address before the nurses of 42 countries attending the congress of the International Coun- cil of Nurses. "Our civilization is meéved, as no earlier civilization was moved," Dr, iggar said, "by the miseries which are revealed to it. As never before mankind is 'showing itself impelled by interest in and kindliness towards the unfortunate. In olden days the enormously = predominant majority were of the Pharisees who saw the Wounded traveller and cared not but passed b on the other side. Today ood Samaritan' is beginning to he Sou the situation. "Just as fertility was the essential feature of the Egyptian culture; beauty the ideal of the Greek; and order that of the Roman, so the wel- comin ing «t J the growth of public health movements, and the work of the Red Cross, Dr. Biggar pointed out that the emphasis changed soon from fiving $0 cure the ills of humanity to ehminating the causes of those ills. "Slowly, very slowly, but still surely, public health workers are in- stilling into the general mind of the people the knowledge that many of their. sufferings sprihg from neglect of the simple laws of health," he said. "And yery slowly civilized people are beginning to realize that it is not enough to guard themselves against infections and to be free from definite diagosable dises. are beginning to realize that health is a positive, priceless possession. They are developing, along with their broadening humanitarianism, an ideal of robust and vigorous health for every member of their clan or face or nation." "I think that without any undue stretch of our imagination we can foresee a time when an organized society which prides itself on being civilized, will by reason of its human- itarianism frankly adopt universal health as its ideal, understand that 'a government free from tyranny is not enough, that education is not enough, that a high standard of living i is not enough, that nothing in fact is enough unless there is assured to everyone of the citizens who compose it every opportunity and every encouragement to maintain himself and condition, and that those who fail to do so are infringers of the code and to be classed with other alelaciers. "It has been well said that the public health nurse is the backbone of preventive medicine. The prob- lem of preventive medicine is to translate the message' of science to the whole mass of the people and to compel an understanding of the gifts it offers. No oné is better equipped and no one has more op- portunity than the trained nurse, trained to understand, trained to make use of every weapon, trained to serve with sympathy and know- ledge, trained, in short to act as 'the expert hand-maid of science in its war against disease." hou goal to which we are mov- St. Andrew's rr wy United Churches 82 Simcoe St. §. ~ Union Summer Services Rev, Ernest Marston, LL.B. in charge Congregations at Simcoe United Church 10 am. Sunday School in Simeoe Strest und S¢. Andrew WORSHIP. SERVICES 11 a.m.--Rev. Ernest Harston--'The Tonic Quality of Spirit." 7 p.m.--Rev. C. D. Daniel, Sunderland--"A Mes- sage by the Way." Evening service will be concluded in one hour. Bright, Brief and Beneficial, HOLY TRINITY CHURCH Cor. Court apd Barrie Sts. REV. S. C. JARRETT Incumbent 30 Fairbanks St. Sunday, July 14 8 om. = Holy Commun- fon. 10 a.m.--Sunday School. 11 a.m.~Matins and Ser- mons. 7 pm, -- Evensong and Sermon. Continuation of Thanks- giving North Simcoe St. United Church Rev, A. MANSELL IRWIN, Ex En v1 B.A., B.D. 89 Greta St. Phone 3263W 10 a.m.--Sunday School. 11 am. and 7 p.m.--The pastor will preach at both services, Everybody Welcome fare of the mass of mankind is be- | Christ Church (ANGLICAN) Cor. Hillcroft and Mary Sts. REV. R. B. PATTERSON, M. A, Incumbent, 503 Masson St. Sunday, July 14 10 School. I a munion. 7 p.m. eEveniong. © Rev. H. A. Meek, West Hill in charge. a. m. -- Sunday m.--Holy Com- They | Pentecostal Assembly 200 King St. %. Sunday, July 14 Sunday Scheol, 10 a.m. 11 am.--Moming Ser- vice, 7 p.m.--Evening Ser- vice. Evangelistic Ser- vice. Tuesday and Thursday Services at 8 p.m. ALL WELCOME Peter 2, 4. EXPLANATION: --Angels || ferred KNOX Presbyterian Church Simcoe Street North and Brock Street Rev. Duncan Munroé 48 Drew Street Phone 82573 Sunday, July 14 10 a.m.--8upday School, 11 am.--"Herod." 7 pm, = "The Master's Yoke." Mr. Munroe would be pleas- ed to meet any New Presby- terians coming to the city, A Cordial Welcome To All _-- Christian Science Birst Church of Christ, Seientist, { 64 Colborne Street East Sunday, Sly 14. vi] "SACRAMENT" ¥, Morning Service at 11 am. | Sunday School 12.10 am. Wednesday Meeting 8 p.m. i Including testimonies of Healing througy Christian Science. You are cordially invited to at- ad the services and to make use of ® : Free Public Resding Room | hepe the Bible and all authorized | Capitan Science literatures may be , borrowed or purchased and periodicals subscribed for. Open on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Sauraare trom 3.to § p.m. | ETI "GOD SPARED NOT THE ANGELS TH IHAT SINNED, but cast them down to LL, 2,7 with Go Hell is the pit or Mal. 3 - see Psa, ., (margin). Immortal Angels cannot : sin, It wil] come to || erself in a truly healthy | Unity Truth Centre 8. 0. B. HALL, KING ST. BE. School at n ST ns. Speaker:--Mrs. Ida Hillis fem Subject: "Obedience." First Baptist Minister REV. JOHN GALY A.M.--"A Seasonable Message." P.M.--The Rev. F. A. Lawson, Ph.B., of Ter- onto will preach; .every church member should hear him. B.Y.P.U. Monday, 8 p.m., when there will be a program of unusual interest. Sunday School Picnic at Lakeview Park; par- ticulars and tickets from go into jon, a £1,000,000 bu ¢ We 8 TRULY. _ oy Fy the Seventeenth Congress will 1 OSHAWA PENTECOSTAL HOLINESS CHURCH 811 Celina Street Opposite Maple St. Sunday, July 7 Sunday School 10 a. Worship 11 a.m, Ev Service 7 pm. teachers. Baskets wall filled a usual. Strangers Welcome Gospel Hall | Sunday, July 14 11 am~"Remambering the Lord." 3 p.m.--Sunday Scheel, 7 pan. --Gospel Service, Tuseday, § pam.~Bible Reading. Friday, § pan'=Prayer Mosting.

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy