Northern Advance, 9 Dec 1915, p. 3

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zlhvlu ......._,._,. .r._Vvv- - ` . New bungalow, J ohn_ street. Prme .3950. T ~ '7 _...A ` 1.1. .,.,. .. A... 1...! -1- `I. .--_.. - nEliW1'o`:):1:ml 3.rick- hous, 1 John south. Price $675.~- " IV 1 ___L 1._.:..- 1.----.& 1.1.. < bu. .a. snvv Yuuuu Cement brick. hous, . rsouth. Price $1400-. " - Frame houseand niceH1Ot;, lJoH1;` .s,ireet, near Bradford. Price"$1050. N oat` house and lot, Cumberland" `sheet. Price. $1300 * " T ` u _- ..._1.__ 1.1.. _L,,-_L' -n 9,; "N ice Bungalow, .-south. Price $1550. N cat brick house, `Price $1500. ' -_-- 1....:..1- 1.---...;. ' i'._1___ ; Vw>V7" '_ ` ~' ' If:-0. .voL. LXIV. No. 49 ' 1\VHOL_.N.}'39 I` 1-Mom-sou only. aunusntp -. The Wonder Car *1] t )TOR-Fo111* c3?linde1;,_ valve gin.-head. ` ,' A lJ.LA.V \,I KJ -L .l.lA'.L L.) 100311 `I L Illl l\IA1I II` V In! LIAI.-I. `IL IAIII J Ll-.l\Aln V A\bUII-O *. r . V 1 T _ I E: 1: I 1 oil pockekts- ' ' C;\RBURETOR4-Zenit11 improved. double jet. `This "make of carbu- retor is used. on cars at f$50Q0_._O0. T 7 _ > 1(}I\'ITIOI\_T%Connecticut auto -light` Ignition." `T.w o-unit, same . as --_._ .._.Z-..J- _L mnonn nn A A \ 4 ; Ix./Av.LJ.I\1u/.I-\.rA1 ugvuvvv-vv vJrv7 nraavnn-co by-- v--_vv ~rv--~ _-_ ward and reverse. T V COOLI_NG--Thermo-syphon system, cellular radiator of. extra size, with large overhanging tank carrying head of water , over valves at all times, f ' u ` ` a . - I-IIJARV AXLE-Threequarter oating, wheel bearing is carried on the wheel-hub and in axle; housing. The load: is? carried .on t axlehousing,` and not on axle-shaft.` g'Niekel-steelgshaftsgand gears. Hyatt roller bear-ings; - _ T Fl-t()1\'T AXLE+Drop forged, I-beain with integral` yokes of special steel, double heat-treated; tie rod ,`ends,' steering spindles and of Chrome Vanadium. steel, heat-treated. __ .o BR.-\KES---Emergency, internal expanding; service, external eon 4>~..n l)"I'I`\ruII 103.. Lunlun Jung r-an lv\n+nn`- \ `- CYLINDERS-Cz;st en iiioc, with upper ha1f bf crank case. Head ,'l..L.. ..`L..LI... Ll.U' -of "`eI1" oi1`U(::;.`1:;;;1:i|e:ad i" `66.o`t3"W " W `W L """" " "" CL['TCH-Cone. V _ " -I _ TV ~ TI1{ANSMISSION -- Selective type, sliding-`gearthree speeds `for- --- _. -_ ....... .. . ~ I ...]-.II \_,;l \./DIILIU V11. wavy, 11 suns |.4|lllI\/J. IAUUAA. \IJ- \.:A|-gnan vnauvo .n..J.\.lI~vu `}12;Z;E1e. \'ALVES-11/2 inch diameter; _ V_ V_ __ V V {- oxL1Nt; SYSTEM_-Splas}_'1 wifcI1`positiv plunger` pump, individual` -3! .,......'l-..Lp. L111. :1 1x1_J|.)"`.l.lJ1llC1 ECIIUJ , 111 IIUJ. uas , DU; v Ayv, \l4llI\/-I. uun vvsa traoting; 10in. brake drums (patent pending.) \\'HEELS--Wood artillery typo. ` ' . ' TV . DPI\'I~Z-_Left side, centre control,` spark and throttle underneath _ _L' - -_-'l....-J._.. -,-.; Al .|_4pLu oxuv, \.zuL1uL\.a uvuvnvn Iulavuooa ..---y. ----v--.... .._.....-.-~.----V s'toering*_wheel. Foot'aecelerator.1 . _ V` STICLJRING "GEAR--CemvpounVd `spur and .Se0t01.`-"-3djuSt9b10 `for wear. `Will pull the wheeVl'ou.t of any rut. 1 ' ` v A _. SP1: I.\'(}S--Front, quadruple, lateral,_ quarter elliptic` sheck absorb- int`. Made of Chrome Vanadium steel. (Patent pejn`(_1ing.e)_ 20:11`, long, Cantilever type. V .. . Bf)I)Y-~Fivo-passenger touring type, stream1ine_w-ifth deep cowl-. and 1_-;._-- ___:_1_ .1___... ...:n;. -....,.;-mlna `\:1r\'(rnQ', ' `_ Du`v`~`;,`;;g IV 511:; \.s\4\z1r vv vvvn -:-.-- .,- I. I 1 "fr 1 \ c-})a.aa\`:11g,UV1. l.aU|.I..l 1.113 ".7 1"`) - <`1:1-sh. Extra wide doors with conca1ed\l.iin gffgS4. r`1NIs1r-B1ack. V 4 '_r ' _ J \\'m~:1~:1,13AsE-%-0nTe hundred andtwo1nheS-. M ; _ tire pump M(>H.\IR TOP AND ENVELOPE---D.0u,ble. act1on_ r r . V V` ` ` t L`? <-mnplctc set of tools, Stewart. " 1.0 " (`11<'(* brackets, etc. - ' { " [. "T 1 " ' " Whom you consider that you are gettmg the room the eqmpme ,. . - .b"1t:by <-ml easy riding q1lal1t1es of 8 `high Priced ca-r =-3 car m , . - ' ' -` L 675L00-if 1110 McLaughlins of Oshawa, f1'.th low pm of" 1.H.B., do you wonder` that th9Y` 3 ? ' Got _\'0u1' order in now, my gllotment 18 24" `V [. _ _ Eleven already sold,` since V CHEVROLET You'll one in Come 1;ow u_1__d% L Street, street, street; in the O. H. A., and both will be strong. The intermediate team will be made up of players in town from the members of the 76th battalion, who are wintering in -the town. 11 UV V Illa, alnllelll '. ` `Lathe lat regnlnr` mting `ofr-_L; _0. `L..No. 985; the ;fol_lowing'~ oicexfs` -<-were elected for the yea} .1916: ` M.,}-Bro."Ernest Caston; AD_._ `Mi; Bro. Frank T_ Keats; _ `Chap. B1`o. ,G.eo. " f~Healy; Rec._ Sec., Bro, Wm.` Keil; Fin. Sec., Bro. Geo. Binnie; Trea_.s., Bro. Geo.` Snidery; D. C., Bro. Roy McCracken; 1st Com., Bro,` . H. ' Sheield; 2nd Com., Bro.` A. `Innis; $3rd "Com., Bro. Geo. Ellsmere;n4th I.-H... `D..- `I -.. `IT."'l`l.........:... .` ELL uu- .LvLU11.uuy. .__ T _ ~ V T Gunner ' Oscar Kerr, of the R. C.` H. A., Kingston, spent _a few " days hege last week.` . ` ` -I" n .1 1-5 1 ;nv- nuvvav vv \/\JLlU Tvhe Ladies Aid "of the `Presbyter- ian Church, met at Mrs. F. Atkin-. son s on Wednesday. ` - 131... `I .. 'IT-`II:..`l.. -1. LL- O1 .1. %""i3t 2a."%`i.e2{."`i73'1"1i'1, L of the '81st IBatt., Toron`to, spent a. few days with his A brother, Mr; Milton Yol- lick.H ` T ' `-1- 1- A III `"Efui"t2l,2; ';1*`{;r`r;:t)er , from here alttetnd-` ed Mr. J as. Hayes 1 sale, at Aptq, on? Monday. - ` n.-..._....~n........_ 17...; .*.t2 n... 13 n- m'J1`\Eiss J.- Ingram, o ~ Toronto, is visiting _ her sister, V Mrs. ' Geo. McLean.` ' ' "Oril1ia. Hockey Club was. `or gan?I ized last Week. The club will enter" two teams, Intermediate and Junior, UL \L \:(\ILLl.o, L V0 ` \J `.300 JSJLLBLILVL-I3 -`EVIL Com.; Bro. 39.3. E11sme're;' 5th ,VGOm. Bro. Robt; Craig; Auditoirs: Bro's."- A. Jary and Geo. Healy. 1);. 1:\.:........: T....:... -1: LL. o1;..:. ""i> te.""1}3`a'v`21*i?{{{i s' of {;he 31st VBatt., Toronto, is visiting `friends here .'t`his.\ week ' V g . I ' R I n n 1 7 1 I8 jrBa"yf`i`eldSt.' `Phone A _- H 11-II=:1~InrrI-:`n_:sT"rs ;OFUB-ARHIE.`-, .THs;couN-1*v orismco:-`Ann THE `common 6|-`T cAN_ADA_OUl-IORITIRION. ORAIGEURST Bc. 6th,191,5 . ......-...Li...... '`...B ,1 ' 4i`BAR11,%%%o-UNIV `OF SIMCOE, ONTARIO DECEMBER 9, L i915 TEBPCCI} E0 5118 VX5101]. U._L 1.11.35. , In the impe1:f t moral. condition of;the,huma"_n` race; God uses the ex-_ periencs _'1;_of_;=.,war. to ssaccomplish - t_hi_s{ 7pnrpose;'_f:Itf'_m'ay_ be His strange _ ~b1 1_t_% e bgiigve }`ass}_1red1yi that .iAit.;i`s:"_G.d_d `-The_r_e;_is.no need to ' ' `-?his*V'oi`l`d:,'-. 61-. to: sup-V s &i. i3i.`nmi9.rl1't17 V IIVIN4 I -Enlargement of character in the ordinary course of events comes through a process of perceptive teachlngy and the, homely experiences of life. The - University is founded and sustained upon such a presump- tion. Eyery faithful student s ex- perience _1s.on_e ;of. growth" through, sometimes, d1stressful_ study. Even the thoughtful child in the public school must [be aware of enlarging _'.faculty and increasing" power as he climbs. the ascending grades of U'stu_dyvset_ "before him. j And` -it is a simply a commonplace to say that $c,L1aracter 2 `grows strong". and `deep through the _, ministry of trial. His- tory; howevefay. \\\ ars to teach-`that the common: round and daily__' task, weave: hampering` f:._lin1it"atio'ns about ;;hnmanii_ty5; -{anyd that some emptiwe ' I` ' Jioweverv. good "they-..-be in themselves, I?1f0` sne.eded*ito eca11.emenbick Band eba`1s'ic_- wfirt1ies_ . %s.. *ra'::1m,1ye [panda .1TiW to `cf;zn9ri+??eeiti`;;*ae2`etIairs;`ltrim ins t11\`:1e~"._"..f.J"*s.";ilo n;l,:l:m'loyA%::.~il1-:'f.l s cg, e w. c. THOMPSON} .1?!-157V` vp,-yvv _ In this time when the civilation of "the worldfis in the crucible of the Almighty, there be .many who say in scornful derision, Wherevis now thy God? Others, with a sincere sense, of personal loss, ask, If there be a God, and he allow such a- world conagration of human pas- sion, expressing itself in" the diabol- ical slaughter of untold millions of men, the ruthless ruin of uncounted homes, and the crushing of multi- 'tudes of broken hearts, does he in.-. deed rule. _in the aairs of men, or is He an absentee , God, sitting out on the rim of the universe, carlessly watching. its soulless mechanism wasting away its physical momen-A tum? Such questions cannot be ignored by the pulpit, because every man who thinks must nd an anchorage for his soul somewhere. The cry of the- heart is one of real distress, and . beyond controversy there is sf11cieIit"r'asbn ` for ' it. ` We believe we have in the text an intimation of the divine antidote andicure for this perplexity and sorrow. Thou hast enlarged to me my A place, or thou hast set me. in a -large place when I was in distress,` The writer `seems to have beensorely beset ' by enemies, and was at his wit s end: but in a way that seemed to him to be divine` interposition---the enemy was either defeated or withdrew from pursuing him. He seemed to himself to be a man walking through a. dark ravine, where. m_any dangers ' lurked, and where dark shadows fell athwart his path, -but who suddenly emerges into a broad plain whose extent and horizon were `full of beauty -and en? he2e9n-. . e ` Q \I IIULL Ill-luI\lLI.IlO With this new outward experience, the gates_ of thought, of hope and inspiration, ing wide open in his soul and he is set,.a3t large from his troubles. As a result, he, _feels him- self to have grown in moral stature, to be `enlarged in character. His life moves forward in a wealthy place, `and all 1 his distress vanishes. I trust we,_ as Canadians,` may have a similar experience. ` 7l`L.....-..'L ...-..'.................' .._--_ ___1_ L- Annnanvuu. \l3II\JJ.A\/lI\J\lO Though our ' enemies may not be defeated or withdrawn, we may be delivered from -all misgiving about them,` or about -ourselvesby attain- ing to larger and truer thoughts of _our place in this world of God's. One of the most notable things in connection with the whole` War is the V. growth of A , Canadian charactejrl bear. . a as a result of the heavier` respons- ibilities__we have been called. upon to n 1' g I .n nan`; u V o L vvJ5avAv auuvv IhtJ_ ` While the ofertory W;s Dl:e`i,ng tak- en the choir sang ` ` Abide Wijgh Me; AL `n... ..I......`.. 4.1.- ....-----.... LL.-. vs: unav vnnvaa -Junta Lallsuv U L|.llI Ll-Lvo At "the closeeof the service the choir and- band were entertained in the church. parlors. Refreshments were served and a pleasant half- hour being _spent. Rev. `D14. Chown. preached `from the text .Thou hast set me in a large place when Iiwas in distress `l).. ..I.... A . 1 "W B""'J` _ _ . T The opening hymn O God our help in "ages -past was " sung to band T accompaniment, as was also the closing hymn. `After . the `Hymn, Lieut, (Rev.) A: t P. 'Menzies, _ lead _ in prayer. L1eut.' Reynold gave as a solo - ' n71.:I.. n... ..nc....4...-._- .....'.. L ..:..... :...1- _ _ . (C5nti!iue1:_ffs1Iispazpe 1): evening servn. s'c'e was mic that will long be remembered; a by "those present. V I A church taxed to its fullest capacity; a semen, by the head of _the church, which "was. in- tnsely patriotic and inspiring-a message well-tted . for `the men who have offered themselves for Free-. dom s cause, as well as to the pee: ple who-_ remain at home; The band of the Batt. occupied the centre of ' the gallery. ml...-.........:..... `I.-..~... ll'\ fV-.'.| ..--... Builder and Real Estate "Agent Ofce 15 Owen St. Phone'288 45] mm um L by IV LIV. Z-P_sal_1`n_ 4 1. Luv-:5. .;ug:.xp .I_.u.g.uuc1.wuu nu u theapp3%ent' r % The Sermon \..-.n. . AADALUAAAD AJVIAAL ALA. 4.4 IA-I \JlJ\./ U\I \.I$l1" than our own brave C nadian lads. This has caused our hearts to swell with pardonable pride. Writhing with the agony of poisonous gases, they rose as it were from the dead, and with the desperation of death hurled back the German hosts and saved the fateful day. Every Can- adian, as` -he thinks of the exploits of our Canadian soldiers, rises with an energy sublime to the awful verge of manhoodand lives on the top of the fulness of life. Not only by the ardor of loyalty have Cana- dians been enlarged, but by the deepening also ; of their religious life. From. many quarters comes the gratifying news of hundreds pf soldiers. being converted to` God. .As an entire people, with few" excep- tions,` we - are becoming spiritualized. We have linked ourselves in loyalty to`. the"_Emp_"ire, Lbut; at we have done more` than 'that ,E,-we\;;,'havep' linked our nationalfsfortugnes` tb;'thq,,fortunes of alicbertm, of - dmss sf ~=Y1P'3VdiY ?'fo.1; the. viweak;~: ,a,and?; h9: ;?pr;n6i131ie'S'i'ewhichI. e rila;ke_i'vChristianl ?1iiVi.'115`11OQd;_ ani1;.j- ;e`O[1_`_1.-'; 4stitutef.i`hei"8oule`434"(lfi:f_'1:.iihiGic:.{i1lii;i.:f Let?-. us: tethank `Q6d_:ra1;so:-:.thct;:he;t has 1 ,,. 9911` up w ' "5? iiiiiii iilaislbebiii I sacred cola, and the very sight of it strikes the note of heroism in. all British hearts, The noble principles for which it` stands hear us aloft "to sublime heights of feeling untenanted by us a few short months. ago. We thank - God at every remembrance of it, and take courage to act uninchingly unto the victorious end of this bloody war. And We believe with all our hearts it Will end in victory. FHL- '['.I_.ILE._1_ 'I'F..-...Z_... _._ _ ......._.....L UV \uA_\.n w-Aw ..- .- .,Whn we to bour hohiepirlsl -}{Ca;1:;_ howp. _t1`u6.. is t_hatj`o1n- _ a nation of mammon worshippers. vnnv uutnnnulu Va. Before the War multitudes of our fellow citizens were living quite oblivious to the higher truths which shape Christian character and give permanance to the life of a nation. They `also thought they were laying up much goods. in store for many years, eating, drinking and giving in marriage; but they Were losing faith inithe things that pertain to nation- al greatness and stability. History is Writ large with the decay and de- struction of nations who had come to believe that life consists in the possession of an abundance of things and a continuous flow of ex`- citements, In a night of drunken revelry Balshazzar the king made a great political oration .to his lords magnifying the resources of his em- pire, he praised allggods but the true God in whose hands was `the very breath of his nation _s life, and in the same hour there was written on the walls of the banquet chamber Thou art weighed in the balance and found wanting. That night Balshazzar was_ slain. In Canada a` few months ago we thought our- selves sober, `but we were really ll\/L |u.lIav V ILL\JllC `drunk with the wine of speculation and materialism. Recall the orations. of our political leaders in hotly con- -tested sections, how they appeal for a lease of , power, not that they might enact! just laws, but that they might nd an easy path `to wealth. Before the war we ' were being edu- cated by many inuences to become` TT? 1 We are in process of being made larger as a people 1n several re- spects; To begin with, we have found "out, the Germans themselves being Witness, that there isvno bet- ter .ghti'ng stuff] in Europe to-day `Linn I\I11i nnvan lmnnivn {3n...-.33.... `-43 .-. g|,L\.v_vc __ -- Lavv K'I.|.a-IKJVO , ' Can sell any of the above proper-I ties on easy terms.. ~ Beyond the` physical enlargement of the Empire, and the intellectual expansion forced upon us by the present distress, there is the still` more valuable asset of enriched `char-` acter.* ` The sense of brotherhood between all the overseas dominions, and of icommon _ loyalty to the Mother Country, linking us together in mutual suffering, have enlarged our sympathies and braed and broadened our manhood. all >\I\al.l. IIIJIAIL UBJ JV 1151.1. vnzu. ALL I LVUVLJ 0 The British Empire is a cement bridge,` cemented with the blood of th(_>`usnands T. _of her b1'aYe_ `men. n * gangsters-are `-of this- `; houlilln `accordance /with ithi__sl prins ~ cip_le,< the .Bi`;itish Empire as as whole, may say; .Thoju-hast enlarged me. in time of distress... This is -true even in apphysical sense. The transform- verted` General. Bothar from "an. en- =emy_ to a friend, and: sent him forth at thehead of an` army of the com- monwealth of South Africa to wrest from "Germany an immense territory, equal in itself to a considerable Em- pire. It is still more true in an in-. tellectual sense. We know that in ing genius of British `freedom con- a twinkling, at the outbreak of the -war, there was borne upon British- ers throughout the world the colos- _sal ' consciousness that they were members" of a _ confederation charged with the duty` of determining the destiny of the world in arms, and of carrying the noble burden of uni- versal liberty. The complexity of the vast problem ` thrust upon us placed it ' beyond the clear realiza- tion of any ordinary citizen, but the very effort to carry its factors has. stretched our powers, and even developed new and surprising cap- acity on the part of our people. The business men of Canada must! also say"`Thou hast set us in alargeg place.' We` are having hard times in Canada. Few of us` do not know this by experience, but we know that our whole conception of business? is being `changed. Under the slogan of Patriotism and Production, the farmer has been urged to turn over the last furrow and get the utmost yield from the land for the benet of the Empire. I,n__\the making of munitions, and some other respects, horse buying for instance, we do not seem to- have reached Christain bus- iness ideals, but a. strong trend of thought in that direction is being generated. _Thank God that in the distress that is upon us, thoughtful; merchants are beginning to see what every Christain is bound to believe, that character, not cash, is the chief` gain `of business life. Belief in the saying of Christ A man s' life con- sisteth not in the abundance of the things he possesses has already sent many business men tother front, men whose salaries ran, to. `$5,000 and $8,000 a year. Our- whole voluntary system of enlistment depends uponl the acceptance of the principles and; motives of public . service which Christ taught. . [ The Christaim church was at rstl conned to little Palestine, and the! Christains were little regarded. byl the great world beyond except_ as a! fanatical Jewish sect; but the storml of persecution broke upon them and they were scattered about every- where, and as they went they preached a`gospel that grew in its! content and application; and in the, present distress we have read of a Jewish_ Rabbi kneeling upon the bat-l tle-eld tohold a crucix before thel dying gaze of a Roman Catholic thati he might sink to rest with the con-' solation of his faith. Is there any-l thing in all this to justify_ loss of] faith in God. Where is the little man who now says Where, is thy G o_d`I~ `-God `is everywhere bringing good out of evil and doing his no-. blest work in the hearts ofmen and: the `lives of nations. | `~~-~- I ,_What .is life anyway, be it long or short, full of pleasure or full of pain, compared. with one s soul, with the growth and enlargements of` ~ {f.Thou; lfijast se_t;us -in;a' large place, and [enlarged us. also; in time of sdistress.- God s -' law.. developes character, in accordance with this law how plain it is. that God has - given a distinct uplift to the char- acter of our women in this stressful time. They have recentlyjdone hun- dreds of things they did -not dream- of doing before the" war. `Instead of ..consuming time and nervous energy upon frivolities, they are knitting socks and with every stitch Weaving in their -admiration and love for the - brave boys at the front. In the as- ~-iliiiothersnwivesi and sisters can. say! i sociations of loving toil they are dissolving social barriers and break- ing out_ into a friendly feeling for all classes of the community. There was real aristocracy in the heart of the Toronto mother Who on being told of a son having fallen in bat-' tle replied that two more were in training.` Another mother, exclaimed, ll('\`l.. ..... `Ill - 2... .....L .......LL I--:...._ VJ. IILAJLLI-at fl-Ll\II:II\lL LLl\IIllI9L_ \JKX\I`I'lIl..I\./MI ! Oh no, hfe V1s not_ worth hvmg more, but` our cause is worth dying! ...MapleLeaf Rgcer - ilgader - Klondyke Lllbu N eatwT> rE;3k house, McDona1d `street. Price $7530; q 1 -I` An X-CUT SAWS Best A-xe Hndls,` 35c each. ` Splitting ` T %VV.edge s,f$t e`el "Sledges, `Everything 2`; i'd!!i?eLs!-,f9-E. the l?.-"."s... `FIVE %P91NTS_; "ARPWAREA Otton s Special 5%-ft.,E{withf handles _0iu- Guaranteed Axes at . $1.25 $2.50 On Wednesday last, accordingto announcement, a large gathering as- sembled on the grounds of the Wes- leyan Methodist Church, in this ltown, to witness the ceremony of llaying the ;foundation- stone of the inew building- now in course of erec- `tion, which is intended to take" the ,place of the old one adjoining. The ifoundation walls, we found, were al- ready laid; and` so much of the sup- erstructure- under- way as to give- a good general idea of` the size and character of the building, which at this time it` is suicient to say, will be a veryliandsome and` commodious structure when completed. Besides the Revs. Messrs. Wood" and Davis, there were a number` of ministers from the` surrounding country, and a large sprinkling of the lay element, including Messrs. William Mann, George Lount, David Morrow, C. Harrison, T`. D. M'cC'onkey, A. Gra- ham and' many others. Prayer be- ing offered up by Rev. Mr. Swann, of ' Cookstown, the chairman, Rev. Mr. Davis, called upon William Mann, Esq., as the oldest member of- the church in this localit) .\ Mr.` Mann referred many years back to ,the early history of` church worship in this part of` the County, stating 'he himself` solicited the rst sub- scriptions for a ch,urch, and succeed-_ ed in collecting one hundred pounds g-twenty-ve of which were given :by- the late Sir Charles Metcalf, lthen Governor of` Western Canada. Protestants, he said, of all denomin- ations, made common cause, and his [own roof sheltered alike the Metho- ` dists, Presbyterian `and Episcopalian. `The Rev. Mr. Datiiner, from Craig- hurst, followed in a few complimen- tary remarks. He tvas followed by Rev-, Dr Wood, President of the Con- ference, who congratulated the pea- lple 0:1 their niaterial advanctlagment, [as no a very ong ime ago arrie lwas considered as remote and dim- icult of access as the North Pole. lHe was glad to see such evidence of ,c_onnexional vitality in the dedica- }tion of this fine building to the prin- lcipals of Methodisni, vested as it .would be in the Conference,`for by [that means the church could never `be wrested from the denomination, HO mattpr Whnf nhonrrno *nr\':r\nI\` 5-3.- -The following account of the cor-. ner stone laying" of the original ,church, as reported in The Advance of Sept_. 21st, 1864', will be read. with interest by the older members of the_ congregatibm. I ya `.1 -A A van: Ill; IICIIUIIIIIIGUIUII no matter what changes might take place among individual members. ,In, the Wesleyan body,_ if a member ~is guilty of speculative opinion not `in harmony `with the tenets of the Church, Conference has the power of dealing suminarily\and ridding the church of the obnoxious ojfend- Q If`, n' New cement. brick. house; Dufferin `street. _Pr1ce $1250. r--- _'-n -_-__ -13 41,- -1, .,_...... lYh ............, .. ...... .-,.._,. . The cht1rcli_;~ must make bare its harm `as anworl`d"force- in the social, the "public, the "national and inter- national life of men. It must .sup- ercede its` conventional? life with act- ivities commensurate with the im- mense needs of the new times if it die not, or, it will pass on through the centuries like a bird with a broken wing;-. - ` onVeV s' spirit~.. An: empiixe `in arms, willing `to die in this faith rather than live "without; is the reply. fl... .`..1..z...-I..'. .....--..A. .......1:.. L-.. :1... {u.oo.-new much In Aoimncz IINGLI OOPIII THIIII CINTI V-vxvqnnvu (Cox.1i;in1.1_Vaf('iv.V on p;age Q uuv o 7 room new- brick house `V Water and light, Frederick street; I-`lice $135Q. A ' ' - 1 1l`1'\ , I1

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