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Port Perry Star, 24 Jan 1924, p. 1

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for the School Boy Egg Producer for the Hens. : and Martha Jane Chocolates SE MORRISON'S . yi it a 10 bay your syrup is by bulk, We Hive brand at 714 cents per Ib. 'dessert you can buy. Bring your 'we will Be vleaed to fill it for you. . expected, so buy while it is hens working for you while eggs are selling high price. In order to do this you must feed the kind of feed--Blatchford's Fill-the- 'Mash gives fine results. We have it: also hell and grit, which are both necessary if you :CLINTOCK Fre Ontario land trou | ways a live one. || these demonstrations il | evangelistic services in I | which arose "Wi! "healing campaign" a special il | committee was appointed to in- * | Oriental cases. "| the substance of their report. B| sized that these latter were all various hospitals in Britain and | facts the subject is al- 'At night you suffer pain, but you hope you will be "better" the morning. Wes. Slways e {hope we shall "be better." [cannot follow the process. We cannot take ourselves apart to see what is the matter. But we | know we do "get better." Hundreds of times we have|. recovered from illnesses--little and big---and our faith in God's ability is very real. Indeed at times it is so real as to be piti- ful--pitiful because of our A norance, We cheerfully every law of health and yet have faith that we can be heal- ed, if God wills it. It is not possible for us to say positively that this unreasoning faith is wrong, but the facts as we see them are certainly against such a belief. Because of this t faith, and because nature is eternally at work healing our wounds, many demonstrations of the healing power have been made. One of the most notable of made by Dr. C. 8. Price during is Arena Rink, Vancouver, B.C. ll | in May of 1923. Because of the || widespread, attention directed to the "heali because of t campaign", and regarding this x vestigate the actual result. of the "healings." This committee was compose of. Vancouver; . eight doctors; three University professors; a lawyer; and a specialist in Recently the report of the Committee. appeared in the Christian Guardian, and this is (1) Some 350 cases were in- vVestigated--the total number of those reported to the committee. All of these had been "anointed for healing" by the Rev. C. S. Price. Of these five were found to be so distinctly benefited as to be entitled to the verdict | "cured." It must be empha- Id however, direct' attention 3 he fact that the value of sugges- gated by the committee of per- sons who have become insane ealing which' had an- nounced to them. The Commit- tee throughout, sought to deal with all data in a dispassionate way, but it has obviously been impossible for them not to be touched by the tragedy of one home, where the father, the bread-winner of the family, and a most estimable man, brooded over the failure of his little daughter, a cripple from a street accident, to receive the healing announced by Rev. C. S. Price, and who, as a result of despon- dency, went violently insane. +(4) The method of treat- ment used by Rev. C. S. Price was, in the judgment of the Committee, that of suggestion, partly in its ordinary form, but mainly in the form of hypnotic suggestion. (For an explaina- tion of the scientific meaning of the term "suggestion" see the report, section 8.) In making this statement they do not wish to be 00d as questioning understood the fact tht ndoubted spirit- ual' benefi ( received by many through ministrations of the Rev. C. S. Price, or as asserting that religious faith on e controversey | the part of the patient is not a useful adjunct inthe treatment of disease. .On' the contrary, they believe that it has been too often forgotten that health bodily and mental, is capable of q | being influenced for good by i of eleven ministers of the vari- il | ous denominations of the City spiritual means. They w tion 'as & curative agency is strictly limited, and that hy- pnotic suggestion can be used safely only by practitioners who are skilled in the diagnosis of disease, and who understand thoroughly the nature of the human mind. The truth of this statement is shown b that the practice of is, in certain countries at the present time, definitely restrict- ed by law. the fact ypnotism It would have been of un- estimable help had the Rev. C. S.Price, when appealed to, given his co-operation by furnishing the names and addresses of " 9" . i i "functional" cases; that is, in those: whom*he anointed. Ths the absence of the structural changes which always accom- pany organic disease, they were directly amenable to mental treatment. © Many such cures are reported in the records of "shell-shock" and other similar cases treated in recent years in in Canada. This list of cures has been ex- tended to farthest limit which the facts adduced by personal "investigation would warrant. In the light of well-attested about similar healing throughout the world the last three thousand To on taro a m- | range and variety of po TE nvesigated cover the ed | Widely Committee pointed out to him that his'ministry would be help- ed by a scietific examination of its results, and the interests of suffering humanity would be served were he to give the co- operation by which every case of anointing could be followed up. However, without his co-oper- ation the committee was able to investigate a sufficient number of cases to warrant definite con- clusions, and is satisfied that, even if the number had been multipied indefinitely, no ma- terial change in its conclusions would be necessitated. The {I've found the wa, =| my mental and pf eq through | bright, ) Jy heart and song is on my lips. 80 far as P's are concerned, tumor, goitre, cataracts, on the brain, moral delinquency, neutritis, shaking y, dia~ betes, headache, malaria, lum- bago, sleeping sickness,anaemia, consumption, sciatica, bron- chitis, dropsy, liver diseases, and various combinations of the above, \ Evidently there is no hope held out for the "healing" of or- ganic diseases--diseases which destroy the tissues of the var- ious organs of the body. The pitiful part is the wondérful faith that is doomed to disap- pointment. A real fact of life is death. Another real fact is pain. The lesson is courage and a thorough belief in the immortality of the soul.. . ' The danger of this teaching regarding "divine healing" lies in the feeling that the person who is not cured lacks" faith, and many very fine Christian people have made themselves unutterably miserable because they felt that their "lack of faith" was the cause of failure of "divine healing" for them- selves, or for their friends. While much is said about a lack of religious sense today, it is certain that many suffer mental torment because they blame themselves for what is no fault of theirs. It takes a sublime faith to travel some miles to receive "anointing for healing" for in- growing toenails; pyorrhoea, tumor, ete., and if the cure does not follow, there is no need: for *| self condemnation, nor has an enthusiastic evangelist the right to give the impression that the victim is to be condemned. The very fact that they are willing to be "anointed for healing" shows sufficient faith if healing is possible.. It takes wonderful faith and courage to face the criticism of neighbours and the habits of a life time to accept the new doctrine perhaps when the body has suffered for years and the mind has suffered with the body. It is cruel to add to such suffering, and no precedent is set for such action by the Master who effected the cures during his ministry. Here is another phase of the subject .of "healing." It is a page from a book by Hunter, en- titled "Pep." "Pep means Poise, Efficiency, Peace. This message is one of joy, hope, health, optimism and good cheer. The way to serene, happy, health, contented life is simple, sure and practical, and I promise that the reading of this book will help you. ' Follow the sug- gestions and this will mark the day of destiny in your life. I shall counsel with you and not preach to you; I shall be reasonable and considerate and altogether practical, for I speak from experience, not hearsay. I've been through the mill; I've had to do with worry, blues, nervousness, fear, dread and in- somnia; I've been fin the darkest recesses of shadowland, and yet to cinch up, ysical equip- ment and come into my natural the red blood courses my veins, my eyes are digestion good, joy is in Now I have an' abundance of pep, which expressive little word stands for pluck, peace, power, punch, patience, purpose, an Se means ency, {and slides ¢ what can be AS Bank with our lo Port Perry Branch, - - E Yok ot om ive eniorpeine Nontes - _ duction, Fon ah STANDARD OF CANADA vith of your iD BANK E H. G. Hutcheson, Jack Miner is a grown up boy who has had sense enough and the simple faith necessary to hold on to his youthful dreams and make something out of them. And he done it in the face of the same kind of op- position that has to be faced in all small communities. Stephen Leacock wrote a book called "Sunshine Sketches of a Little Town," and the pictures of small town life in it are good; but they are no more accurate than Jack Miner's picture of what he terms the "retired fail- ure"'--the man who haunts the street corner "chewing the rag" and tobacco, making fault find- ing criticism, but no helpful suggestions. We all know the type; but the knowledge did not interfere with Jack Miner's dream of bringing Canada geese yearly to his home at Kingsville, Ontario. That dream was the neighbour- hood joke; but "he laughs best who laughs last," and now the joke is on the other fellow. Jack Miner is known from one end of Canada to the other as a great naturalist. He is not a "dry-as- dust" naturalist, but a human being who uses simple language and has an observant eye that is willing to be taught. He doesn't pretend to know it all; but has gone into the study with an open mind. Running all through Jack Miner's address is a strong re- ligious vein. Indeed he says that he owes his ability to read, and to speak in public, to his work with a class of boys in Sun- day School. They were his in- speration. « His method of introducing his religious teachings i8 not argumentative but is full of good sense. He claims that he found his first game laws in the 22nd chapter of the book of Dueteronomy, and he further claims that if this game law were properly observed there would be no need of further game laws. Here it is. "If a bird's nest chance to be before thee in the way, in any tree, or on the ground, with young ones or eggs, and the mother sitting upon the young or upon the eggs, thou shalt not take the mother with the young. Thou shalt 'surely let the mother go, but the young thou mayest take unto thyself, that it may be well with thee, and that thou mayest prolong thy days." If this law were followed Jack Miner says that the promise in the 1st chapter of Genesis and the 26th verse, would be fulfil- led--*and let them have domin- ion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over the cattle, and over all the earth, and over every creeping thing that creepeth upon the earth." But such proper control can never be enjoyéd so long as men ly for the pleasure of killing. Another ound taken by Jack Miner is that the "wild" birds are not wild--we are the wild creatures. As he puts it-- "if you saw a man with a knife in one hand and a "pistol in the other chasing you to take your life, 'and you ran to hide in a cellar, would you. think that you were "wild"? Certainly the re- sults achieved by Jack Miner ve the conquering power of ndness. His motion pictures show done visit his "sanc hunt the birds and beasts mere- Health very clearly |V with "wild | s Do You Appreciate Birds? ; Jack Miner Does. ville every year, and many of them have been coming for several years in succession. Not only do geese congregate in the "sanctuary" but many ducks take advantage of the food of- fered. Jack Miner's estimate of the Canada gander is very high, and his story of "David and Jonathan is a wonderful picture of bird devotion. Incidently to the care of free birds, have grown up many features of interest to commun- ity welfare. The ball grounds where from fifty to a hundred young folks can enjoy clean sport; the reforestation of tree- less lands; the beautiful arbors and vistas of climbing roses these are some of the outgrow- ths of a life devoted to simple loving-kindness. The tile maker who lacked many early advantages has become a figure of national importance. -The keynote of his growth has been kindly naturalness. We have to thank the I. O. D. §. for bring- ing Jack Miner herg. eee QO Ores SCUGOG The municipal Council of the Township of Scugog held its first meeting on Monday, Jan- uary 14th. Members were all present and subscribed to the declaration of office. Mr. Geo. Sweetman, Reeve, took the chair, Minutes of last meeting read and approved. Mr. Jk. C. Crozier moved that the Treasurer be instructed to pay Stanley Ploughman $5.50 for work on road No. 7. On motion of Mr. Dowson the Clerk was instructed to order 100 dog tags for 1924. On motion of Mr. J. Alldred the Methodist Board taxes were struck off the Collector's roll for the year 1923. n motion of Mr. Frank Dow- son the sum of $4. was ordered paid to Mr. Cory Hood, as sheep valuator. On motion of Mr. C. Hood, a by-law was passed appointing Messrs. R. J. Burnham and Juo. Joblin, as auditors. On motion of Mr, Alldred, Mr. Amasa Sweetman was appoint- ed assessor at $50 salary. The following persons were appointed Pathmasters and fenceviewers; Alfred Prentice, No. 1; Ern- est Hance, No. 2; Chas Samells, No. 5; Wm. Dowson, No. 6; S. Ploughman, No. 7; Jno. Sweet- man, No. 8; Geo. Jackson, No. 9; Arthur Sweetman, No. 10; Oliver Williams, No. 11; Wm. Jeffrey, No. 12. Poundkeepers -- No. 1, Isaac Rodman, No. 2, Walter Samells; No. 8, Wm. Jeffrey. On motion of Mr. Crozier, Mr, Geo. Jackson was a ted School Attendance for the year. 3 On motion of Mr. Crozier, Mr.. H. Fralick was --& Hember of the I Board of On motion the caretaker was paid $16.00 the past year.. The Council ourned to meet again the last Saturday in May as a Court of Revision. 5 FE)

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