i FO an PERSONAL : of its readers in items to "this Ras fot on phone 85. --~Mr. and Mrs, Kenneth Massey 'of Rawdon, near Belleville, expect to make their home in this city in the New Year, ~--Mrs. McAdie ot Rutherford, New Jersey, has been spending a few days with Mrs. W. F, McAdle, 24 Celina St, ~--Mr, Cyril Deyo- or this city will spend Christmas with his parents at his home in Kingston. »=Mr, and Mrs, O, C, Richard- son have returned from Caledonia where they attended the opening of the new St. Paul's An-lican hurch o° which their brother, the lev, P, Warick Richardson is rec- r, Another of the delightful bridse rtles of which the "Gables" is eins noted was given by Miss Mo- ald of Whitby on' Saturday af- ternoon, The prize winhers were Miss McKay and Mrs. King, --Mr, and Mes, Robert Kelly and son of Toronto, Mr. and Mrs, Lloyd Kelly of Montreal and Mr. Frizt Kelly of Chicago will be guest of their parents, Mr. and Mrs. F. ¥, Kelly at the "Gables" « for the rp Reports from the Bay of Quinte Conference Committee in connee- tion with the United@Chureh's Maintainence and Ext Fund cover a number of presbyteries, Rev, G, A, Williams, conference or- zanizer, states that canvasges are till in progress in many eiveuits, 7th a number seeking to raise he amount of their twelve months' location in the present short year f nine months, In Kingston Presbytery, with he city churches giving a good jead in missionary givings, the ex pectation is that several town and village charges will go well beyoud the three-quarter mark toward meeting the twelve month allgea- Christmas holidays, Ee -------------------- Sr-- ) T. 2 a lesson : g! i 'on, RElginburg is sure of the nine OU don't need to, Diet is really quite simple, Fatty, rich foods make you fat + + » Starches help to keep you slim, ' And good bread provides the starches, The theory that bread makes you fat has been disproved, Bread steam, Rely on it for the Dr, Hall's 100% Whole Wheat Bread, | Bredin's Cream Loaf. Bredin's Fruit Loaf. ~~ Breakfast Rolls, amby Bread -1:e rich butter loaf | Vienna Rolls, present months' amount the twelve month total ia order to hip oft any sHarGomings Shee. . | where and to assist in '| missionary finance. Out Deficit. Cobourg is completing the eam- vasa, with of going slightly over +the th uarter mark, Port Hope is to be U8 08 Strihting on p_-- of $215, a shortage 000 on the 1928 objective for the whole United Church of Canada, these strong town churches are be- bets od to take care of a portion ng more than the h ub A, the 1927 al 4 "the running mber 31, usual of speakers have been Visi, the uita in the Bay of Quinte urging a higher stand. ard of kly offerings for the eur- Pent year as a means of wiping out the deficit and opening up 1928 with a balanced budget, Began at Whitby At the famous. laymen's confer. ence held in Whitby College cariy this fall, it was decided to recom. 1end to the pastoral charges that 'welve months' offerings be given efore the nine months ended, This logan has since heen heard and esponded to at numerous banquets 'nd group meetings in the preshy- eries of this conference, with the result that the historic Bay of Quinte district is out to set a new and Is alming at) LIS o - GEA L Yah WA" DAILY TIME: shortened 3 Presbytery as a whole will, ig is estimated, in nine months, ending December 31. ---- New York, Dec. 19.--Mrs, Wal- ter Ferguson writes as follows in the : Women who organ- 1ze and run clubs have a perfect passion for procuring some helpless man to stand up and lecture them. Completely surrounded by george- ously gowned and deliciously scent- ed females, club entertainer who has previously performed a nofable achievement in some line or other is begged to bring his "message" to the ladies. They do so love to lionize a man, The general atmosphere into which one of these educators steps is one of ardent admiration. He Is assailed with sweetest smiles and plerced by adoring glances. Yet there is doubtless no crea- ture in the world so uncomfortable, 80 miserable, do anguished. Although this man may swagget inwardly he trembles, These alien creatures, with smiling yey critical eyes, he is not at home among them. He would®like nothing so much as to fackle them en masse .and make a dash for liberty. Al- though they appear to reverence his wisdom and learning, he can never be sure that they mean what they look, | Why aeny yourself tne pleasant things of life to stay thin? choice in most Canadian homes, Toasted, it is simply "scrumptious!"' Try this simple change in diet instead of drugs, medicated baths or starvation, Bamby Bread replacing heavy fatty foods, This way slimness is easy to achieve, easy to maintain, and above Wholesome all weight will remain n gain the fresh abounding energy you need, Ask the Canada Bread man who serves so many of your neighbors to leave a loaf with If you prefer to telephone, call F 4 a 0 /) shawa 24 CANADAGR BREAD COMPANY | , - - Opmed by 1873 Canadians, Choir Assisted By Popular Artists from Toronto Uns der Direction of George Henley, Effectively Ren- der Excerpts from Han. del's Messiah n An audience that filled St. An- drew"s United Church to over- flowing, heard the church choir of §0 voices under the leadership of George Henley render Handel's Messiah", Oratorios are the serip- tures of music, and Handel's "'Mes- slah" is in that literature of mel- ody a blending of Isaiah, St. Luke, and the Vision of the Throne in St, John's Apocalypse. To render any of it requires more than voice and technique; and to have rendered it as St, Andrew's Choir did last night marks 'a milestone in the musical history of Oshawa, Such a triumph of shee beauty spiritually rendered is the crown of choir director's service, Mr. Henley was warmly congratulated after the service for the achieve- ment which, though an honor to each participant, would have been impossible with direction even a shade less great, F. L. Plant of Toronta was the organist, thus leaving Mr. Henley free for the leadership of the choir and his own noieworthy contribu- tions in the bass solos. Mr. Plant is a great organist with an exquls- ite appreciation of the dramatic in music. Lights should be dimmed when he is at the keyboard of a worthy instrument so that the ma- jesty of his art may, as far as pos- sible, seem divorced from any hint of mechanics of instrumentation which produce his effects. The organ set the high standard of the aratorio's rendition at the beginning. There is a pause and EE \ p= ve, Your and you will -- i 1439 i g£ ® g il 4 3 ¥ Ife gi¥i Ea i b ; fit 23 8° sk¥ fie =i g Hi fr Hi i fe poprrrrr sprrrrrPYP ~ prepress pops rrrPrEPRIPIRPISIPIPIY BAP PIPPI PPERPIIPS Town POP PRPAPRIPPIPPIPIPIPISP prprpprpsEprERS Musical Service at St. Andrews Delights Large Congregation on Sunday MONDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1927 L] then a seemingly far-off echo of melody. A moment later one im- agines a voice singing in the dis- tance, and them John 'W. Deacon, tenor soloist of the Knox Presby- terian Church, Toronto,, began that incomparable "Comfort Ye My People™. Sung as Mr. Deacon sang it, this opening solo of the "Messiah" is probably the most precious of its jewelled splendors. No one with an imagination trained in biblical lore can hear it and not feel a sense of mountains overlooking the proud, the beautiful, the erring, but ever divinely-loved city of Jerusalem. One envies those who know their Isaiah and are hearing Handel's setting for that psalm of hope for the first time, One of the illustrious things about the "Messiah is its blending of solo and chorus, and in that solemnly sweet "Behold a Virgin" solo which was so splendidly rem- dered by Miss M. Cassleman, mes- gosoprano, the chorus followed with "O Thou That Tellest Good Tidings". Precious Words These words are Isaiah's, but they are 'also English words, rich with the shade and depty of Shakespearian age. They are mel- ody in themselves, and the chief of them is "Tidings". Perhaps the etymologists will disagree, but there's sea-faring and white sails in it. A tide, and a ship come home. Mr. Henley's finest personal cen- tribution to the prograss was, probably, his number "For Behold Darkness" and then that song of the ancient prohpecy which told of those who should, walking in darkness, see a great light. Man's elemental fear of = night lived in that first number. The organ car- ried its own message of the shadow of death, and through it the voice of the singer emphasizing the ter- rors of that which is the soul of chaos, Then the relief, for such drama may not We too long contin- ved, the bold prophecy of Him who should ba "a light to Gentiles", Mrs. Grant Rerry, soorano, had the honor of siuging that part of the *Messiah" which is founded vpon the Annuniciation to the Shepherds, for honor it is--wheth- er in v-rds or song--to retell the gtory ce" that first Christmas morn- 'nt wlon Isaiah's prophecy of the Prince of Peace was confirmed by t"e ravs of the Star of Bethlehem. ha ehomsus tent up th: anreel's "Glory to Gnd" with a brillianey parhaps surpassed, if it was, by their rendering of the "Hallelujah Chorus", the group n the 53rd with that art &) 0 LN -) ' Uv 2) U v) v of WARDS | ¥/ ¢) a) ba NJ L J PAGE AIL TERE GLAD TIDINGS FOR THOSE WHO PLANTO GIVE TABLE LINENS 150 PURE IRISH LINEN TABLE CLOTHS at fully 1-3 less than regular, mostly k $2, Size 2 x 2} yards $4.65, $5.95, $6.65 Size 2 x 3 yards $4.95, $5.95, $7.45 25 doz. Irish Linea Dinner Napkins DISCONTINUED PATTERNS, ALL PERFECT QUALITIES, Most of them in heavy Double Damask, Sizes 22 x 22 and 24 x 24, Clearing at 3 Price Regular $7.50 for $3.75 Dozen Regular $10.00 for 4 + $5.00 Dozen é# Regular $15.00 for } voice an | at 'hing kr e CLL 6 he ¢ otlon in others ger's resorting tn than sincerity of As he ganc, not a few In rew's pictured for them 1/the "Man of Sorrows" who d> 1 221 rei d o® men, .0 dle das a man dics asking feaven if He had been forsaken, $I: llelejah Morus" Then the drums and the bugles mph eounrnled -in "Lit Up ad O Ye Gates", which was de to the final number of eziah's" forty and four-- IIal'elnlah Chorus', huns ends the prohpecy of h, Part fulfilled with an actitude wen is the bulwark of Christian hore, but part of it to be yet rezlized in the supernal splep- dor of heaven and earth redeeme' wc e a chorous of ten thousand times ten thoucend will set eler- n'ty ringing with the "Hallelujahs" | of endless bliss. Rev, Mr. Maxwell, minister of St. Andrew's, conducted the brief opening service preceding the sipg- ing of the oratorio. OSHAWA & DISTRICT aurht else thon ht C.N.R. Earnings 4 The gross earnings of the Canadian National Railways, including the Central Vermont Railway, but ex- cluding all lines in Canada east of Levis and Diamond Junction for the week ended December 14, 1927, were $4,465,464.00, as compared with $4, 77451400 for the same week of 1926, a decrease of $309,050.00, or six per cent. CHIEF BROADCASTS : APPEAL TO CANADA Los Angeles, Dec. 18--Herman Cline, chief of Los Angeles detectives tonight appealed through the Asso- ciated Press to every chief of police in the United States and Canada to wire him descriptions and criminal records of every man ever suspected of the crime of kipmapping. Chief Cline, directing a tremendous effort to apprehend the fiend killer of kid- napped Marian Parker, said: "It might. We will never rest until we bave him." Sy $7.50 Dozen ry. ] i 1 "wilight € he com : £ Mundy (] ' 4 ngs, "K al . x 5 1 'The Mi . - ¥ Iray sar \ ; ; € ld vole i uthers -- ------ 0 -- INDIAN EARTHQUAKE No employe wants ninety cents i ; each dollar he has due on pay days 1 Rangoon, Dec. 18 ~The upper por- | neither does an employer want 8 1 tion of the historic Sule Pagoda was | minutes for an hour, Think it © ins badly cracked by an earthquake 1 Whicl rocked B wide area herenhouts | om 1 on Saturday morning, causing vast || RACTIC | damage. The shock occurred at 2.30 (§ 1, THROPRACTI D | : EX o'clock and lasted eight seconds, It |} less Therapist, will be in the "office 4 | was preceded by a rumbling, hissing | § Simeoe street, north ev Alternogn i Them sound, which ended in an explosion, | | Monday, \ tunesday, and Fr Resiuentil life so Some observers attributed the hissing | § calls made ir. town and surrounding diss wendach: to a brilliant meteor which accom- | ff fiict. Consultation is free at @ panied the quake, ong - 1516 Disney | A / £1 : Pea ON \ 3 [ (8 ' 00 - | uur [FYE | Ha At no more than the cost of other high-grade plate 185 NE of the many features that - make Holmes & Edwards Inlaid Silverplate so acceptable as a Christmas gift is the fact thates despite the years of added life and beauty which the Inlaid feature assures--FHolmes & Edwards Inlaid J costs no more than other highs ' ; grade plate, ] In Holmes & Edwards Inlaid the ! most used pieces are Inlaid back of both bowls and handles with pres cious blocks of pure silver--givi mp HOLMES § EDWARDS § solid protection at the points hardest wear, and so ensuring en» tire satisfaction, the consumer to be the sole judge,