- PACE EIGHT THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, SATURDAY, MARCH 19, 1932 » Sunday Services in the City Churches EASTERN ONTARIO NEWS | "The House of Friendship" r Simcoe St. United Church "RGNALD ©, GEEN, L-¥.CM., REV, J. 8. 1. Wi Be oy Sa , B.A, B.D, Or Master, 3 pom--8 Special to young men 11 AM, WOMEN'S MISSIONARY SERVICE Speacial preacher, REV. A. L. RICHARDS, B.D,, of Whitby, ! ; UNDAY SCHOOL . 7PM. "WHEN A MAN'S A MAN" PREACHER REV, J, 8. I. WILSON Holy Trinity ANGLICAN rch | f Corner of Court and Barrie I REV. 8. O. JARRETT, Incumbent, 30 Fairbanks | f PALM SUNDAY Ce Holy Communion. i Ia ios Procession of Palms. Subject: "Palms and Their Symbolism." be distributed to the Congregation, # p.m.~Sunday School. 7 p.m.~~Evensong and Sermon. HOLY WEEK .m.~Holy Communion, Lom Ah *Cracifixion", by the Chole Tues. 7.30 p.m.--Devational Service, Wed. 7.30 p.m.~Devotional Service, Thurs, 8 a.m.--Holy Communion. Thurs. 7.30 p.m.--~--Devotional Service, Branches of Palms will GOOD FRIDAY 12 to 3 p.m. the Cross." 8 hours Yevotional service, "Olivet to Calvary," "Stations of " |St. Georges | ANGLICAN Cor. Bagot and Centre Sts. | CANON C. R. dePENCIER, } M.A. Orgonist and. Choirmaster, | Matthew Gouldburn, A.LCM 8 a.m.~Holy Cofmaunion. 1 a.m.--Morning Prayer, Solo by Mr. Reg. Terrett, "The Palms" 2.30 p.m.~--Sunday School. it 7 p.m.~~Evensong. | Wed. 8 p.m.~--Lenten vice in the Church. GOOD FRIDAY 11 a.m.~Rev. J, M, Cresall, L.T.H., ot Toronto. Ser. Christ Church (ANGLICAN) Cor. Hillcroft & Mary Sts. REV. R. B. PATTERSON, M.A. Incumbent PALM SUNDAY 8 am.~Hoiy Communion. 10 a.m.~~Syr. Sunday Schoo! 11 a.m.~Morning Prayer. Sermon, 'Thy King Cometh' 2.30 p.m.~Sun 'ay School. 7 p-m.--Evening Prayer. Sermon, "Thou Art Peter-- That Rock was Christ." Unity Truth Centre SERVICE, SUNDAY 11 a.m. IN GENOSHA HOTEL ALL ARE WELCOME. CHRISTADELPHIAN "We _shall 5, 10; Dan, 7, 27; EIGHTH BIENNIAL CONVENTION - e United Lutheran Church of Th ica will hold its eighth Bien- Convention at Philadelphia on ber 12, 1932. Dr. F. H. Knubel "New York, has been president or several terms, The Lutherans ave considerable share in the nts to be commemorated at the George Washington Bicentennial. In 1774 Rev, Peter Muhlenberg met Revolutionary leader and was jade chairman of the Committee Safety; the year following a ; Sompany of volunteers composed of rman Lutherans from Pennsyl- nia arrived in Boston; and a Lu- |. theran pastor on Charleston, S. C. 9 banished because he refused to y for the' king's cause. It was e vote of a Swedish Lutheran ich decided whether Pennsylvania Id secede from Great Britain, d in 1778 when Washington's yguard was dismissed for treach- , fourteen officers and fifty-three , all Germans, from Pennsyl- were chosen, who acted until close of the was, - - -. Day by Day SUNDAY All that we say returns, The bitter word or sweet; Days, weeks or years may inter vene, ut soon or late The spoken word meet. and speaker All that we do returns: The deed that's true or base We may forget, but all unseen And parallel The doer and the deed keep pace " --John R. Moreland. MONDAY Personality has been described ag "the individual resource and power by which a man bears up against life and transmutes his surroundings." Paul had person- ality to an incomparable degree, Wherever he comes he overcomes, There is something unusually splendid in the way he faces the experiences that come {o him-- the more or less unannounced and unexpected happenings--storms, shipwrecks, imprisonments. Amid all, the slings and arrows of out- rageous fortune no word of com- plaining is heard, In every cir. cumstance we find him "putting a cheerful courage on." TUESDAY While the world shall roll To-morrows, fresh, shall rise from out the night, And new baptize the indomitable son With courage for its never-ending ght... . No one, I say, is conquered till he yields, And yield he not, . .. New day, new hope, new courage! Let this be, O soul, thy cheerful creed! --James Buckham, WEDNESDAY Take advantage of the sun while it shines. Life's visions do not ghine and glow like brilliant and continuous noons. They come and they go, bright intervals in the waste of grey twilight and darker night. Let us seize our brilliant moments! --John H, Jowett. THURSDAY But something down in is goading-- A something that really is I-- And I cannot fall from the ranks of men Or die as a coward would dle; I cannot flee from the battle, Though I bear the brunt of the fight, Nor lezte the light of a hateful me ay For the dark of a restful night. --Garnett L, Eskew, FRIDAY Man must pass from old to new, From vain to real, from mistake to fact, From what once seemed good, to what now proves best. --Robert Browning. SATURDAY The demand for peace is uni- versal, There is only one reason for non-success, We are all afraid of the consequences, Fear dogs our footsteps through life. . . . Happy indeed is the mun or wo- man who has the courage to say with Carlyle: ' / The futire hides in it Giladnesg and sorrow; Wo press still, ~ Nought that abides in jt Daunting us, onward. This is the moral and spiritual attitude which Individuals and nations must adopt it ever the problem of security is to be solved.--~George Lansbury. Sunday School Services THE COST OF SAVING The International Sunday £chool lesson for March 20th, "Jesus Dies on the Cross," John 19:37-22, 256-30. Golden Text: 1 Corinthians 15:3b. We come today in our study of these lessons from the Gospel of Jobn to the crucifixion of Jesus. And the question comes to us, as it bag 80 often come to us before, What can we possibly say avout this great central event in the history of mankind? Our prob- lem is not that there is nothing to be sald, but rather that there is so much to be sald that one does not at all know where to be- gin, The great difficulty is that, saying all that we can say, put- ting it this way and that way and the other way, explaining it af- ter this fashion and that fashion and the other fashion, when we get through talking about the Cross of Jesus we know perfectly well that we haven't explained anything, we haven't at all fath- omed the depth and the fullness and the significance of this great event, One section of the Church re- sponsible for the International series of lessons gives the title to this lesson, "The Cost of Sav- ing Others." Perhaps to look at the lesson from that point of view would be most profitable, But when we have sald all that it is open to say about that phase of the thing, there still remains a whole great compass of truth thar we haven't at all looked at. We might ask, Why does it cost 80 much to save others? And, of course, we will never be able to get an answer to that question, But it always has cost, ag every- one knows who has ever made any effort at doing it, That the cost was tremendous in Jesus' care we can wel] unrerstand, be- cause the saving was to be tre- mendous. Can we not believe that it must be a great saving 'hat called for so much sacrifice! Perhaps it is not out of place to remember that, no matter what our theory about the divine purpose in relation to Jesus' death on the Cross, He came to it through the selfishness and of Hig own race and His own faith, It would probably be a mistake to hold sush fixed views about the necessity for Jesus' death as would take away any ro- sponsibility from those who were guilty of bringing i. about. One of the lessons to be learned from the Cross, an {mportant one, but not a central one, is that that dreadful display of wickedness which the Cross reveals, looked at from the point of view of those responsible for it, is a tragic 1)- lustration of what pride and pre- Judice and unchecked self-will will lead men to do, We can scarcely afford to miss that les- son, for the men who crucified Jesus thought they were good men; they did what they did in an excess of zeal for what they at least tried to think was a good cause. That teaches us that we must take a very square look at rome of our very set opinions, it perhaps we may discover them to be the very meanest kind of prejudices instead of the good- looking. things they seem to us to be, But there wera others besides the Jewish religious leaders who were {n part responsible for that scene. upon the Cross, Those ieaders could not have carried thelr projoct through if it had not been for the somewhat fickle and unthinking crowd who, in thoughtlessnoss and foolish ex- citement, allowed themselves to be worked upon by the leaders whose hearts cherished a wicked purpose. The crowd hadn't any particular prejudice against Jesus; in fact, it would seem as it it might have had a real lik- ing for Him, But notwithstand- ing that act, {t became one of the factors in His crucifixion and mast bear the blame for the wicked thing that was done, Sin. nirg through weakness and folly may be a sinning with terrible consequences just the sgme, The rulers had thelr share in this great tragedy. And the rul- ers of that day were very much itke political leaders In our day sometimes are, their great sin lay in letting themselves he used and in not taking a strong, an honest, a heroic stand for the things that in their own souls they knew to be right, And, of course, they tried to get from under their own - responsibility and to lay the blame on some one else, which is a political trick that we sometimes see attempted even In our own day, AGNES IS CAUSTIC IN REFERENCES TO PARLIAMENT Montreal.-- Agnes MacPhail, M.P,, on the sins and faibles of Parliament provided an evening's alert attention and relaxation when she spoke before the Sat- urday Night Club recently. She did not handle the august assem- bly gently; indeed she thinks it will be consigned to oblivion un- less it mends its way. "Parlia- mout must adapt itself to opin. fon, The thin cloak of democracy is evaporating. No person who uses hig mind con remain a mem- ber of a major party in this coun- try"--were some of her exptes- sions. And she dealt caustically with what she called the "flum- mery"" of Parliament, meaning He opening and other ceremon- es. pride and savage batred of those. King Street United Church 11 a.m.--COUNTING THE COST." 2.30 p.m. ~Sunday School and Bible Classes, 6.45 p.m~SONG SERVICE, 7 p.m.--"JESUS AND YOUTH IN DEALING WITH TEMPTATION." The Minister will preach at both services. St. Andrew's United Church Cor, of Pruce St. and Simcoe St, 8, REV. F. J. MAXWELL, Minister Mr. George Henley, Organist. plimented the company on To Build SChool Kingston.--At 2 meeting of the Property Committee of the Sep- arate School Board beld it was decided to call for tenders for an eigbt-room school on the present site of St. John's School, It is the intention to secure tenders for the new school and present the same to the board, and that if they are not regarded as reason- able, tenders will then be called for a four-room addition to the present St, John's School. Visited Kingston Kingston.--Mr. E. R, Birchard, general sales manager of General Motors of Canada, was in Kings- ton on Wednesday. He attended the automobile show at Jackson Motor Sales, Limited, and co. the progressive way in which busi- ness was being promoted here. Record Attendance Peterboro.--A record attend- ance of gome 100 delegates as- sembled here for the concluding of the Grand Orange SUNDAY, MARCH 20th, 11 a.m.--"The Power of God." 3 p.m. --SUNDAY SCHOOL and BIBLE CLASS 7 p.m.--Bible Teaching about the HEART. Special Passion Week Services every night next week, led by Rev. D. W. McLachlan, D.D., of Toronto, Ca bo cr CALVARY BaptistChurch Comer Centre & John Streets Pastor--Faul B, W. Gelatt 9.45 am, -- Men's Bible | Class, 11 a.m bite" 3 p.m.--~Sunday Schoo) | 7 pm.~*"As in the Days of Noah" Mon. 8 p.m--Young Peoples Wed. 8 p.m.--Prayer and Praise Service Fri. 4 p.m~--Children's Sune shine Hour Fri. 8 p.m.~Choir Practice {i rr pry "Ruth the Moa. peg ---- TE ER 7s Wve RTA | GRACE Lutheran Church 150 ALBERT §T. Rev, A. C. Hahn SUNDAY, MARCH 20th 10 a.m, Sunday School 11 am, Morning Worship 7 pm. Evening Worship | KNOX Presbyterian Church Simcoe Street North and Brock Street BEV. DUNCAN MUNRO 34 Brock St. W.. Phone 2554 | 11 a.m.--Morning Worship. { 8 p.m.--~Sunday School and | i Mixed Bible Class | 4.15 p.m. -- Men's Bible / class. Special speaker, | Mr. Annis, Local Barrister 6.40 p.m.--Song Service, 1 7 p-m.--~Evening Worship, The Minister will preach at both services. Everybody Welcome. if in NORTHMINSTER UNITED CHURCH Rev. A. Mansell Irwin, B.A, B.D, SUNDAY, MARCH 20 11 a.m. ~The Pastor, an 7 p.m. ~The Pastor, WELCOME CORDIAL CENTRE STREET UNITED CHURCH Rev. Geo. C. R, McQuade, Minister 11 a.m. ~CHOSEN VESSELS, 7 pm.~THE SECOND CHANCE "Come Let Us Worship" The Church Everywhere Ecclesiastical matters in Germany at the present time scem to be as puzzling as its finances, A recent disturbance 1s led by General Lu- dendorff who is remembered as one of the High Command, the right- hand man of General Hindenburg. He wants another Reformation with all creeds scrapped and as its funda- mentals "race feeling and race ideals." He appeals for. a religion with the marked impression of Jew and Greck and Roman made sec- ondary and its Germanic form and spirit over all. His wife is one of the leaders and the society is called arter Tannenberg, where one of the great victories of the War took place in 1914. Alrcady it is split between radical and conservative elements, the former which are call- ed the Deutschvolk are not allowed to belong to any of the Christian denominations. The National So- cialists, on the contrary, proclaim themselves as Christian, and the old veteran President Hindenburg is a devout Lutheran. Over against this Dr, Karl Barth is quickening the religious life of Germany which is making the people sing the Te Deum with new heart. In England two former school- mates, Father Ronald Knox: and Mr. Arnold Lunn have published a book called, "Difficulties," in which the Catholic and Protestant controversy is revived. The former is a convert to Rome and at pres- ent a strong defender of her dog- mas, while the latter is the son of Sir Henry Lunn, the famous Wes- leyan who gathered 'several con- ferences in the interest of the re- union of all Christians, His son is a gallant swordsman and they fight it out with good nature and honesty. Two British missionaries have drawn the attention of the Govern- ment in India. Father Verrier El- wing a former Oxford don, seems to have begn too active in his sym- pathies with Gandhi and according to report was deported from the Province where the boycott is the most active. Another is a Scoteh doctor named Forrestor Paton, who some time ago adopted the dress and style of living of the poor; and has been very popular with the In- dians. His presence with the peo- ple when a conflict with the police tek place in Madras, was unfortun- ately misunderstood and he suffered as a lawbreakesy | ALBERT STREET | UNITED CHURCH Rev. 8. C, Moore, B.A., B.D, 11 a.m.~"The Glo yy of the Cross." | 2.80 p.m.~Sunday School, Men's Brotherhood. | Speaker, Rev. A. M. I-win. | 7 pm.~"Father and Son | Service." Tue. 7 p.m.~--Fathers Son's Banquet, Everyone Welcome. and Christian Science First Church of Christ, Sclentist 64 Colborne Street East Morning Service at 11 a.m. SUNDAY, MARCH 20th SUBJECT "MATTER" 12.10 p.m., Sunday School. Wednesday Meeting, 8 p.m. Including testimonies of Heal. ing through Christian Science. You are cordially invited to attend the services and to make use of the Free Public Reading Room where the Bible and authorized Christian Science literature may be read, borrowed or purchased. Open on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays from 2 to 5 p.m. The Salvation Army Will be Celebrating the 48th Anniversary C gg pr Sues co ag Good on & ontinuing until March SATURDAY 8, SUNDAY 11.3.7, Svecia) Services Sonducted by onel Cedby, Yh la. hen ae MONDAY at [] pan. <The Colne} . the Salvation Army, Tre TUESDAY 8 p.m. A Birthday Party and Program; Reminescence. WEDNESDAY Soldiers and Ex-Soldiers: A hearty invitation exte: to those who used to beloyg, FRIDAY, 8 p.m. Band and Sengster Festival, May we take this ity of thunking our friends terest and aceldent which Lodge of Ontario East, when the main resolutions which were read bad to do with the division of the corporation tax for Public and Separate schools. As this matter is being taken up by the legisla- tion committee the resolutions were simply received. Seriously Injured Napanee.,--Ag the result of an occurred about one-half mile west of the village of Odessa, Meks Sielverman, re- #lding at 340 Spadina avenue, To- ronto, was so seriously injured that little hope was held out for his recovery at the Kingston Gen- eral Huspjial where he was rush- ed immdRiately after the accident by Dr, J. E, Mabee of Odessa. Twenty For Highway Kingston.--Sixteen men select- ed through the local Employment Bureau for work on the highway underwent medical examination and along with four other men, already selected left on Friday morning at 10.30 o'clock over the Canadian Pacific Railway for Sharbot Lake and will be employ- ad by the Kendall Construction Company, Closed to Fishing Cornwall.--In order that bass may be conserved, fishing of any kind in three of the favorite fish- ing creeks of Glengarry county is prohibited for 1932, except dur- ing the bass geason, July 1 to Oe: tober 15. A copy of an order-in- council to this effect has heen re- celved by Royal Baker, game and fisheries warden here. The creeks affected are the Black River, at lancaster, and Sutherlands' and Finnles' Creeks at Bainsville. Re-open Investigations Cornwall. -- New York State and United States authorities hav- Ing definitely abandoned the case, Royal Canadian Mounted Police have this week re-opened their in- vestigation into mysterious ecir- cumstances surrounding the death of Angus Thompson, 40-year-old Indian of the St. Regis, Quebec, reservation, whose body was found in the St. Lawrence river at Lancaster on September 30 last, Detective - Sergeant Tom Moore, of Ottawa, is in charge of the case, Will Add to School Ottawa.--A special meeting of Ottawa Separate School Board to consider the report of the special building committee of March 11, approved the erection of a two- room addition to Holy Angels School and a four-room addition to St, Agathe's School, H, J. Mo- rin being named as architect for both works, It is estimated that the cost of the two additions will be a the neighborhood of $40,- Dissatisfied With Cost Kingston. -- Members of the City Council are not at all pleased with the action of the Public Util- itles Commission in fixing the cost of street lighting at $25,000 per year and it was hinted in elvie circles that the council may make & request to the commission to cut off a number of the lights in an effort to bring down the cost. Members of the council are set on paying the commission $20.- 000 and no more and some time ago Mayor Wright told the com- mission that if it was found that $20,000 would not cover the cost of the street lighting that an ef- fort should be made to cut down the number of lights; in other words that the city be furnished With lights to the extent of $20,- To Be Superintendent Ottawa.--An early announce- ment of the appointment of In- spector H. C., Fatt as superinten- dent of penitentiaries in succes- fon to General W. St. Plerre ughes, is expected. General Hughes was recently superannu- ated Want Dredging Work Kingston. -- The Board of Works will ask Dr, A, BE, Ross, Kingston's member in the Federal House at Ottawa, to take up with the Government the question of dredging out the slip at the foot of Princess street, in order to provide for the quick loading and discharging of vessels at the ele- vator of James Richardson and Sons, Ltd. This action was decid- ed on at a meeting of the Board held on Wednesday afternoon. Almonte Won Cup Almonte.--For the fourth time In the five years in which it has heen In competition, the Stewart Cup, emblematic of the champion. ship of Lanark County, comes to Almonte. Although the locals dropped a 3-2 decision to Carle- ton Place this week, their 8-0 vie. tory in the Junction town gave them a margin of five to three on the round. Have Little Illness Cornwall. -- Despite reports drom other cities and towus of Eastern Ontario having epidem- fics of minor illness which have necessitated closing of schools, Dr. C, J. Hamilton, M.O.H., stat- ed that there fs comparatively little Sllness in Cornwall at the present time, School authorities reported that attendances this week were up to the average and, it anything, better than usual at this time of year, ' Won Every Game Morrsburgh. -- The Morris- burgh Curling Club closed a most successful season by finishing the competition for the Christie Bro- thers' Trophy which they have held for the past two years, They won every game played for the cup since it was donated to the Winchester club by he Christie Brothers in 1921, and proved con- clusively that the other towns eligible for competition for the cup would have to produce much better opposition if they hoped to win it from the Morrisburgh club, The members are getting 4n all the games they can among them- selvey while the cold weather is ere. Ice 15 Inches Thick Morrisburgh,--Ice cutting is at its peak just now in Morrisburgh, The recent lengthy cold spell has made ice reach to its greatest thickness of the season in the St, Lawrence, and two firms are reap. ing a harvest of ice more than 15 i inches thick, Half a Mill Kingston. -- The Civic Health Committee will ask the Finance Committee to fix the tax rate for the collection and disposal of gar- hage at one-half mill on the dol- 17r on the assessment liable there- to. This is the s2me rate as that levied in 1931. The decision was reached at a meeting of the Health Committee at the City Hall on Tuesday afternoon. The recommendation will be present- ed to the Finance Committee at its meeting Thursday evening. Skidded Into Pole Belleville. -- Skidding into a telephone pole, an automdobile owned. and driven by Mrs, H. Mel- vin of Winchester, was almost completely demolished while Mrs. Melvin received severe cuts, one broken rib, two cracked ribs, and a badly strained back. Mr, Melvin was in an automobile directly be- hind his wife, as they were driv- ing new cars to his motor car agency at Winchester. Mrs. Mel- vin was attended by Dr. J. J. Rob- ertson, and is in the hospital. Provinelal Constable Byles inves- tigated, School Estimates Smiths Falls, -- Esimates for the current year's educational costs in Smiths Falls were tabled at a special meeting of the local Board of Education here and will be submitted to the Municipal Council at its next meeting. This figure provides for $33,000 for public schools and $35,000 for the Collegiate Institute. In total the estimate is the same as that for 1931, although the appropriation for the public schools has been re- duced by $2,000 while that for ithe Collegiate Institute has been Increased by a like amount, App®int Two "Ofticials Carleton Place.--At the regular monthly meeting of the Municipal Council of the town of Carleton Place, Willlam W, Pollock was appointed town solicitor and H. J. Leigh was appointed to the posi. tion of police court clerk. Navigation Closed Kingston.--The navigation sea- gon of 1931-32 officially closed in Kingston harbor on Tuesday nght for the ferry Wolfe Islander fafl- ed to make her scheduled trip re- cently because of ice conditions. This smashes all previous records by thirty-eight days, the latest previous closing having occurred on Feb, 5, 1913, when the harbor remained closed for navigation until March 24. With mild wea- ther in prospect for the rest of the week, 1932 is likely also to set up a new all-time record for the shortest time the harbor was ever closed by ice. Dog or Wolf? Pembroke.--Two local youths were given a great deal of credit for bagging a wolf recently and now a resident claims his police dog disappeared recently and doubt has entered the mind of County Treasurer J. M. Jamieson, Local experts are divided on whe- ther the pelt which the youths turned over to the treasurer for the $25 bounty is the late police dog or a wolf, so it will be sent to the Deparmen of Game and Fish- erles at Toronto for decision. Use Aeroplanes Kingston.--Kingston underta- kers have used aeroplanes in the last few days to cross to Wolfe Island, as the ferry boat is not able to get to the island wharf. Golden Wedding Morrisburgh, -- Mr. and Mrs. Melvin A, Barkley celebraed on Monday their golden wedding an- niversary and received many con- gratulatory letters and calls from friends everywhere, Their family consists of Blake, of Vacaville, California; Dr, Keith, of Chicago; Genzemer, of Elma, and three grandchildren, Cecil of California, and Lloyd and Dorothy of Morris burgh. CHARGE FATLURE TO END SLAVERY League, Backed by Three Great Powers, Fails in Liberia New York--Governments of Great Britain, France and United States and the League of Nations bave failed to put an end to slavery in Liberia, it was revealed in the House of Lords by Viscount Snow. - den, a Government spokesman, says the New York Times in a special cable from London, Members pressed to know what was being dope to terminate the cruelties which descendents of the 15,000 Anglo-American freed slaves were alleged to be inflicting on 2,- 000,000 native inhabitants of their adonted country, Charges were made that the pres- tige of the League would be irrcpa- rably damaged by the failure to act effectively where Geneva has bLe- come so deeply involved, but Lord Parmoor and Viscount Cecil of Chelwcod said they opposed any at- tempt by the League to administer the country. "It would. be futile," Lord Par- moor declared, "and probably would lead to greater difficulties and more brutalities, It would be a terrible revelation if the civilized world, af- ter Los | Snowden's disclosure today found it unable to produce in Lib- eria ordinary conditions of civiliza- tion desired in dealing with slavery or forced labor. The absent-minded old Scots min ister discovered one Sunday that he had left the Manse without the manuscript of his sermon--and the Manse was a fair distance away, too--but, being a gentleman of con- siderable resource, he announced the 119th Psalm, which has an in- credible number of verses, and once the congregation had got well under way he strolled off in leisurely fa- shion to his home. Having retrieved the script of his discourse he ob- served his favourite briar and to- bacco pouch and sat down for a smoke. Time passed and eventual- ly the verger appeared. "Come awa, sir," he pleaded. "They've warsled awa to near the end, and now they're cheepin like canaries." Thousands of Children Have Colds. Schools forced to close in some districts . , . » Have you had {t? No. Well you're lucky---nearly everyone has. A man was in yesterday whose wife and four kiddies were laid up. So you see the flu germ is no trifler. Hundreds of fame ilies are the same. It's up to you to see that yours take the necessary pre- cautions to avoid it if pos. sible. A well known physician suggested the following as a means of protection: Gargle the throat fre quently during the day with Mi 81 Antiseptis. This pro- tects the mucous meme brances from invasion of cold germs. Put a few drops of VAPURE on your pillow each night to keep the nasal passages "lear while you sleep, Take a saline laxative cach morning, som like Regesan Fruit Saline or Will's Salts to eliminate the poisons from the syse tem, This is not a guaranteed remedy but a sane, sound bit of prevention that is start' today. 39¢, 69c Vapure Will's Salts ane dl REXALL DRUG STURES Phone 28 Thono 68 of cure. Don't take chances, septis .... Saline ......... 19¢ "QUICKLY" 'Phone King E. Simcoe 8. worth the proverbial pound Mi 31 Anti. 50c¢, $1 Regesan Fruit . Wit in need of Drugs Jury & Lovell All Beef HAMBURG Monday Specials 10¢ Fresh Pork TONGUES BACK SPARE RIBS Fresh Frozen 3%3c 15¢ Blade BEEF ROAST Leg Veal ROAST 16¢ VEAL STEW 3 Ibs. 26 c 12Y/2¢ Lamb SHOULDER CHOPS 18¢