Cor. of Brice St. and Simcoe St. S. REV. F. J. MAXWELL, Minister SUNDAY, OCTOBER § 11 am. - Communion Service 3 p.m.--Sunday School and Bible Class. Gordon Maxwell will address the School. \ 7 p.m. The F yiendly Church " Thé Minister Will Preach. ALL ARE WELCOME | King Street United Chrch 8. Chas. E. Cragg, M.A, B.D. 11 am. -- Making Burdens Light" 2.30 p.m.--SUNDAY SCHOOL AND BIBLE CLASS. 7 p.m-- 'Playing The Game' A special sermon to Ball Players. All "Ball Players" and "Ball Fans" in the city invited. Special Music as follows: Anthem--"Ere Another Sabbath"s Close," by Ernest Bowles. Solo and duet parts, Mrs. E. F, Farrow and Mr. E. J. Luke. Male Quartette, "Saviour Keep Us Day by Day," by 1 Allen Sankey, ~~Messrs. Herbert C. Treneer, Frank Walters, C. Staples and Frank Hare. : Puet--""The Valley of Peace," by 1. H. Meredith, -- Mrs, E. ¥. Farrow and Mrs, Dunn.' Solo--"My Task," by E. L. Ashford.--Master Eriiest. Col bourne, o£ Christ Church Evangel | (ANGLICAN) Cor, Hillcroft and Mary Sts, 200 King St. West Rev. R. B, Patterson, M.A. Incumbent, 503 Masson St. J. T. BALL, Pastor Residence, 21 Park Hoad 11 a.m.--Holy Communion South. Phone 19217, and Sermon. 10 a.m.~--Sunday School. 2.30 p.m.~--Sunday School. 7.00 pm.--Evening Prayer. 7 p.m.--~Evangelistic, day. All. Welcome Wed., Oct. 8---All day ses. Tabernacle 1 a.m.--~Morning Worship 8 p.m,~Tuesday and Thurs- ALBERT SI. UNITED CHURCH lena Dv. | 8. 0. MOORE, B.A., B.D. Mee one 567F ANNIVERSARY AND THANK OFFERING Pastor Preaches at Both Services 11 am.~"Will You Be Missed?" 2.80 p.m~Sunday School and Bible Classes. 7 pm.~~"The Man On the Fence." _ Fifth Sermon in Series. Spesinl Music ai both services by an augmented choir and other gifted singers. EVERYBODY WELCOME Centre St. United Church REV. W. P, FLETCHER, B.A, B.D. Anniversary Services |" -- 11 a.m.--Rev. A. J. Wilson, President of Bay of Quinte 2 RALLY DAY. Tp illustrated by pictures taken by Mr hit aravels in various parts of the Men. 8.30 -- Aviv Se md Comm NE GLASSES IN' STORAGE The White Howe wi wine glasses, we informed, have all heen packed d put in storage on the express of President Hoover. Living' one's convictions fs, after all, a e- and strenuous cffort make people, ive up to hel ey Tenn ------ A world's _ greatest specialist growing life. Oueent convictions than % 'make a very! other' In a peculiar way Jesus is the in 'the pedagogy that properly deals with He is still more mo- dern than we are; He is not ancient; He is not even simply contemporary ; He beckons us from'a vantage point. on SERVICES. IN OSHAWA CHURCHES Holiness Church tomorrow will be conducted by Pastor G, Legge. Evangel Tabernacle Rev. J. T, Ball, the pastor, will conduct the services of Evangel Tabernacle, on Sunday. Christian Science "Unreality" is the subject which will' be discussed at the regular ser- Wee of the First Church of Christ Scientist tomorrow morning, Grace Lutheran : Rev. A. C, Hahn the pastor will conduct the services of Grace Lu- theran Church tomorrow. Calvary Baptist Special harvest home services will be held at Calvary Baptist Church tomorrow with Dr, BE. Ralph Hooper of Toronto preach- ing both morning and evening. A Rally Day session of the Sunday school will be held Sunday after- noon at 2.45 o'clock and Rev. John Linton of Toronto will give a $pec- ial address. Albert Street United Anniversary and thank offering services will feature the worship at Albert Street United Church tomor- row, The pastor, Rev. 8. C, Moore, will preach on "Will You Be Miss- in the evening the subject of 'his sermon will be "The Man on the Fence." First Baptist 'Church Rev, Aubrey W. Small will speak in the morning on the Church in life of today. The ordinance of the Lord's supper will be observed at the close of the morning service. In the evening the pastor will gpeak upon a subject which was announe- ed for last Sunday, but was not de- livered owing to his unexpected ab- sence from the city. St. George's Anglican Services at St. George's Anglican Church on Sunday will be conduct- ed by Canon C. R. dePencier, the rector. In the evening, Master Er- nest Colbourne, will sing a solo en- titled "The Holy City." King Street United "Making Burdens Light" will be the subject of the pastor, Rev, C, E. Cragg, at the morning service of King Stret United Church, Sun- day In the evening the pastor will preach on "Playing the Game" a special sermon to ball players and ball fans. Appropriate music will be rendered by the choir, Northminister United Services at Northminster United Church, will be conducted by the pastor, Rev. A, M, Irwin. In the morning he will preach on "That Withered Hand Restored." Chil- dren will also be baptised at the morning service. Knox Presbyterian The Sacrament of the Lord's Sup- per will be observed at the morn- ing service of Knox Presbyterian Church tomorrow, Rev. Duncan Munro, the pastor, will preach at hoth services. St. Andrew's United Services at St, Andrew's United Church tomorrow will be in charge of Rev, F, J. Maxwell, the pastor. A communion service will be held in the morning, while in the even- ing the pastor will preach on "The Friendly Church," Christ Anglican Rev. R, B. Patterson, the rector, will conduct the services of Christ Anglican Church, Sunday. :- Holy Communion will be celebrated at the morning service. Centre Street United Special anniersary services will be held at Centre Street United Church, tomorrow. Rev, Dr, W, P, Fletcher, the pastor, will be in charge while Rev. A. J. Wilson, president of the Bay of Quinte Con. ference of the United Church, will be the special speaker. In the evening Rev. Wilson will give a travel sermon jlustrated by pictures taken during his travels in various parts of the world. A Rally Day session of the Sunday School will be held Sunday afternoon. Holy Trinity Anglican Special harvest Mirna ser- vices will be held at Holy Trinity Anglican Church tomorrow, featur- ed by appropriate music, special psalms and anthems, A children's service will be held in the after- noon. AVIATION COMMITTEE (By Canadian Press Leased Wire) London, Eng., Oct. 4.--Hon. | Hugh. Guthrie, Canadian Minister of Justice was yesterday appointed chairman of the imperial confer- ence's committee on civil aviation. Capadians thus head two of the 'important erence committees. Hon. Maurice Dupre, solicitor-gen~ eral, 'bejuk chairman of the arbits ration committee. EAR EES SEAR ' The thrill we get out of the endur- ance flying records is the prospect that : before long "endurance flyers Judge. an, As Siiskiapmars Would proband have put it had he lived todayail the world, Cities Star. Suggested slogan fo for. itis scien- tists endeavoring to break down the that is eternally ahead.~Christian : ! Guelph Herald, molecule : pan atom, boys." ed?" at the morning service while | will go up and never come, uliowns< bri 's a sand+trap and men and | women pends duffers. - Borde Jor en The Possible | We knew a man once who' could not sing, who could not make a speech, who could not do a hundred things which he would have liked to ut he stgod at the door of the church ever Sunday and he wel- comed all who came, And when thére was a great revival and certain women who had been careless grew enthusiastic in the work of saving men, a godless butcher came to church, and was niet by some of the newly-awakened women, who shook his hand and urged him to give him- self to the Lory But he said that these same women had been coming to' his shop for years, and they never knew him when they met him on the street; and he went his way unmoved: if anything, hardened. Then the man who had go standing at the door of the church for years met him, and said, "Will you give yourself to the Lord?" and all that was good in him leaped forth in a flag response--and he found the Most of us look longingly at the heights which we can never climb, and we wish that we could do some really gerat thing; and all the while the talent which God gave us is there ready for use, if only we know enough to usc it for the glory of God and the spread of the vk yg The Church needs to-day not the one man of ten talents, but the thousands of men and women who have only one talent, or even half a talent. With such as these God builds the new Jerusalem; with such as these the Man of Nazareth undertakes to make all things new. God made no mis- take when He made so many com- mon men. He made them because the world needs them, The Tragedy of Fallen Ideas To see a nian of good reputation take what looks like a sudden slump in integrity gr moral conduct is a tragic sight, But it is a sight that we have all had to look upon occa- sionally, when we were not looking very far away from home either, Through carelessness, or sudden op- portunity, or some momentary failure of clear vision, we have all indeed, done things of which we could not feel altogether proud after they were done. What the thing was, or how great was its turning aside from 'that which is finest and truest and best, was not the important matter; the all-important thing was what we did when the discovery was made to us of the true nature of the lapse what- ever it was, The writer of one of the Psalms gives us a leaf out of his book, "Fs®m the depths I cried unto thee, O Lord" He doesn't tell us just what' depths they were, but 'we can casily imagine that they were depths which his own folly or sin or sel- fishness or neglect or stupidity or lack of faith had helped to create, And we can see at once it doesn't make so very much difference what it was that had sent him down into his caverns of grief and despair and shame, or how "deep down it was that he had gone in his sorrow and re- pentance and eclipse, there was hope for him and comfort for him and a gracious uplifting and help 'when once he had turned his eyes up to heaven and had told his story into the ears of God. The difference be- tween our big sins and follies and our little ones does not impress us very much, as indeed it ought not to, when from any depth of sin- consciousness we direct our prayer unto heaven. There is really only one sin that is big enough and black enough to keep a man down in the depths for ever, and that is the sin that pre. vents him from turning his eyes oe and making his prayer unto his God. If.a man will only look up, no matter from what depth, if he will only aspire, there is joy and comfort and restoration and re- newal for him, and the hand of God Himself will lay hold upon him with almighty strength and set his feet in a safe and sure way and put a song in his mouth and an abounding joy in his heart. We mustn't eyer forget it, there is only one supreme moral and spiritual tragedy possible in the life of any man, and that is the tragedy of fallen ideals and dwindling ambitions for good, and contentment with the things that are unworthy and mean and tendin downward,. The discontent with all that has been achieved, the upward reach toward all that is better and more worthy, is the divinest thing in any man's eart, and when it dies hope dies with it, Do not forget it: the tragedy supreme is the tragedy of fallen ideals, TIME ELEVATES THE MEMORY OF WOODROW WILSON History Throws Favorable Light on Career of Great Man With what. some some of us, in the im- Jatiense of affection regard as pain- ful and exasperating slowness, hut for all that with inexorable R Fortitnde, the fame" 6f Woodrow Wilson grows aore | luminous. The win Pai} with a fidence that was itself a us, has already decreed a by {| i i J rene Satis i geni- 'Woodrow Alcohol and Prosperity Field Superintendent, Royal Templars of Temperance Seience teaches that even so- called moderate drinking shortens the life span by from ten to thir- teen years, and so we must con- clude that such a practice is not a good economic investment. Today, it is dificult for a drinker to se- cure a job in a "big business" plant, and much more dificult to retain the job if he is lucky enough to se- cure one. ule "G" Gigante firms like the Ford Mo- tor Co. refuse to hire a man who drinks, however, moderate his ha bits are, and scores of other manu- facturers have adopted the same eonditions of employment, Rule "0," 'which prohibits railway em- ployes from drinking whether on or off duty, has made the American Brotherhood of Locomotive Engi- Pennfless and Prematurely Aged Through Drink neers and Firemen the largest to- tal abstinence organization in America, An Exile The drunkard finds himself an exile so far as employment is _con- cerned; and the moderate usér of alcoholic beverages is fast becom- ing a monkey-wrench in the wheels of industry, In our owh city, one of our leading industrial plants has just installed a machine costing $20,000 at one end of which the square plates of tin are fed in, and without being again touched by human hand, turns out the com- pleted can---a can load of them asach day. Is it reasonable to ex- pect that such a machine is going to be placed in the care of a man with an alcohol soaked brain? The Old Teamster A decade ago, the products of agriculture and of commercial and industrial enterprises were drawn by teams and teamsters. A few drinks did not materially endanger the produce or driver because the faithful animals were sober and able to keep to the beaten track. Today thousands. of motor trucks are carrying a tonnage that was unthought of in the old days and the Intrinsic value of both trucks and freight are such today that a tipsy driver would be a tremen- dous menace. Along The Hilltop By Cecil Francis Lloyd If 1 should reach the hilltop To find a shadow lie Heavy on the blown grass, Never grieve will I; I! watch for gleams of beau- ty Flying clouds disclose; Beauty that is sweeter, Fleeter than the rose, Far below the "valley Dreams in sun and shade, Many a drowsy rosebud On its heart is laid; Valley is for roses, Drenched in sun and dew; Hilltop is for spirit, Changeless as the blue. The Ancient Idea Away back In 1840 an abstainer had difisulty in securing Yife in- surance. The records of an English company show that an abstainer who applied for insurance was looked upon as a sub-normal risk, and in one case where insurance was granted the premium was in- creased 10 per cent, because t applicant "repudiated the goo things of God as found in alcoholic drinks." Life insurance companies today look upon a man who drinks as a poor risk and such a man is able 'Lo secure protection only on condi- tions much more stringent than those imposed mnpon the abstainer. As far back as 1914, at a eonven- tion of presidents, medical direct- ors and actuaries of 48 life insur- ance companies, the chairman in his report classed "moderate drinkers as decidedly unsafe and oxhibiting a higher mortality than total abstainers." No Prosperity Thus we see that looking at ft from a collective point of view, prosperity could hardly knock at the door of the moderate drinker today, If looked at from the standpoint of thé individual we gee, too, that he only stands to lose by lowering his mental and physi- cal well-being by a glass or two each day, Dr, Eugene Lyman Fisk, medical director, Life Extension in- stitute, speaking on the questions, says: "I firmly believe that {ts greatest menace to society is in its ro-called moderaté use, which, among the great mass of people who use it daily, but in so-called moderation, results in diverting these people from other resources of upbuflding and constructive character. How much latent ea- pacity for achievement for adjust- ment for business social, scientific and artistic success has been nar- cotized and suppressed through- out a whole. lifetime by alcohol, we ghall never know, but we know enough about its influence to be sure that it has thus maimed and crippeld many millions of lives." Further, it is a fact, too obvious to require to be enlarged upon, that money spent for liquor cannot be used for the purchase of the necessities required in the house- hold, If a man of moderate in- come spends part of his earnings on booze, it usually follows that wife and children have to be satisfied with fewer clothes and shoes, poor- er food, less entertainment and have to forego many comforts in the home that might otherwise have heen provided, Causes Want How many families were depriv- ed of comforts they had a right to expect? How many families suffer. ed hardship and privation because the huge sum of $57,000,000 was spent for alcoholic beverages in Ontario. last year? How many men are actually out of employment at the present time because this $567, 000,000 was diverted from other legitimate business enterprises, creating a lessened demand for their products, which in turn pro- duced a condition where employees had to be laid off because of this decreased demand for the products of these industries? Becomes a Menace Total abstinence will soon be re- cognized as a necessary condition of life in the man or woman who expects to succeed, for as Professor Charles Reitell, of the University of Pittsburgh, says: 'Alcohol at- tacking as it does the nervous sys- tem, thus becomes a menace to me- chanico-industry. A menace, first, because it lowers and endangers the productive power and organization of our industrial establishments; second because it Increases error on the part of workers which in machine industry means great loss- es to life and property." of the great, As you suggest, some of the hate which encompassed him in his life still endures, and may even be bequeathed as a malefic heritage to generations as yet unborn, but only as a grotesque perversity in- creasingly pathetic in its ignoble con- trast to verified reality-*John Spar- go, in The New York Times. The opposition 'of .the Church to the liquor trade is founded on the nature of the Church and the nature of the traffic. They are incompatible. ~Bishop McConnell. i The Cross is the centre of all time, the centre of all space, It is the fountainhead of all truth, and it is the fountain of all grace. --Katherine Booth-Clibborn, "La Marechale., Repentance is just about out of the yocabulary of the church, even as it is out of the vocabulary of the world. What people now want is to feel re- spectable without being respectable, --N, Carolina Christian Advocate. CHRISTADELPHIAN "BEHOLD THE LORD COMETH out of his place HE RO the inhabitants of the prvi for their iniquity," Isaiah 26, 21, Reader see also verse 20, and Matthew 24, 3-44, Deliverance Promised To Some. Whe? Lutheran Church MASONIC BUILDING Rev. A, C. Hahn 154 Albert St, , Sunday, October 5 ! © 9.80 a.m.~--Sunagay School. 10,30 a.m, Morning Wor- ship. , ALL ARE CORDIALLY WELCOME QMCor TREET United Church "THE HOUSE OF FRIENDSHIP" Office 3128. Minister, Rev. E. Harston, LL.B. Phone 148 Asst.--Rev. J. 8, I, Wilson, B.A., B.D., Phone 2608M 11 am, "Constructive Friendship" Communion Service : 3 pm. -- SUNDAY SCHOOL AND BIBLE CLASSES. "Making Life Count". ' 7 pm, The Minister will preach at both services, GOOD SINGING FINE FELLOWSHIP HELPFUL SERVICES A HEARTY WELCOME AWAITS YOU HERE. | Holy Trinity Church REV. 8. C. JARRETT Incumbent 30 Fairbanks St. Harvest Thauksgiving 8 a.m.--HOLY COMMUNION 11 a.m.~--~CHORAL EUCHARIST 3 p.m.--CHILDREN'S SERVICE 7 p.m.--~FESTAL EVENSONG. Appropriate Music. ALL WELCOME Special Psalins and Anthems. First Baptist | Churc KING ST. EAST Rev. Aubrey W. Small | 18 Aberdeen St, 11.00 ath, "The Church's Place in Modern Life." The Ordinance of The Lord's Supper will be ob- served 8 p.m.--Church School. 7.00 p.m, "Running With the Hare |. and Hunting With the Hounds." First in a new seories on "Wise Saws and Ancient Instances." Wednesday 35 p.m. Prayer Meeting WE INVITE YOU TO WORSHIP? WITH us ANGLICAN CANON C. R. dePENCIER M.A, Cor, Bagot and Centre Sts, Organist and Cholrmaster-- Matthew Gouldburn, A.LCM 8 a.m.--Holy Communion. 11 Am. ~Morning Prayer, 2.30 pm--=Sunday School. 7 p.m.- -Evensong. Baptisms second Sunday each month. CALVARY . BAPTIST CHURCH Gospel Centre--Athol { 5. 5. RALLY AND HARVEST HOME Dr. E. Ralph H / of Toronto Will Neil otench 8 the | at the Har. To Tn fa Rev. John Linton of Toronto Will give the special address at the . Rally Day session of the Sun- day School at 2.45. Wilson's place among the greatest is A CORDIAL WELCOME AT ALL SERVICES | Young People's Monday at 8. Prayer Meeting Wed- Hetdny at 8, Saturday at 7.30. Choir Prmaticey Friday Oshawa Pentecostal Holiness Church 811 Celina Street Pastor G, Legge In Charge 10 a.m. Sunday School 11 aan., Pastor G. Legge 7 p.m.<Evening Service Tues. 8 p.mi-- Prayer Meeting Fri. 8 pim.-- Bible Study Everyone Welcome "Christian Science" First Church of Christ, Scleutist 64 Colborne Street East Sunday, October 5 Morning Service at 11 a.m SUBJECT "UNREALITY" Wednesday Meeting, 8 p.m. locluding testimontes of Healing through Christian Solence. You are cordially tovited to attend the services and to make use of the Free Public Reading Room where the Bible and all authorized Christian Sgience literature may be read, borrowed or purchased and periodicals subscribed for, Open on Tuesdays, Thursdare and Saturdays trom 2 to § p KNOX ~ Presbyterian Church Simcoe Street North and Brock Street Rev, Duncan Munro 434 Brock St. W. Phone 2554 ww 11 am--Communion Ser- vice, 3 p.m,--Sunday School and Bible Class. 7 'p.m.--Evening Worship. 'The Pastor at both services, "Sound Doctrine, singing and a Real' come are features of Knox « Church, Northminster United Church Rev.Mansell Irwin, B.A, B.D, Pastor 39 Greta St. Phone 8368W 11 a.m.--~"That Withered Hand Restored." Baptismal. 2.30 p.m.~--Sunday School. Classes in full session. 7 'pm.~--Hvening Worship. The Pastor will preach at * both services. ' Mon. § pm, -- Missionary i Department of the League,