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Oshawa Daily Times, 28 Feb 1931, p. 6

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) » St. Andrew's United Church Cor. of Brace St. and Simcoe St. S. REV. F. J. MAXWELL, Ea ll A SUNDAY; MARCH 1st 11 am, "Behold!" 3 pm. SUNDAY SCHOOL and BIBLE CLASS 7 pm. "An Interesting Message From An Unknown Book" COME AND WORSHIP King Street United Church Rev. Chas. E. Cragg, M.A., B.D. : 11 am, v "JAMES--THE ENTHUSIAST" A full The pastor will make a very lLmportant Statement, att e of bers requested, 2.30 p.m.~Sunday School and Bible Classes. 6.45 p.m~Song Service. TT pm, Special preacher, REV. W. E. Millson, B.D., OF TORONTO, A HEARTY WELCOME TO ALL --r ALBERT ST. UNITED CHURCH REV. 8. C. MOORE, B.A, B.D, Muster 80 Elena Street. "hone 5671 11 am~--"The Ministry of Tears." Junior congregation leader, Mrs. O. Eagle, 2.80 p.m.~Sunday School and Bible Classes. ~All ages, : 7 pn.~--Bright, brief, song serv Ice. "The Magnetism of Jesus'. Bright, brief, gong service, A WARM WELCOME TO ALL Monday, 8 p.m~~Young People's Society. Presbyterian Church Simcoe Street North and Brock Street Rev. Duncan Munro 34 Brock St. W. Phone 255% Centre St. United Church REV. W. P. FLETCHER. B.A, DD. 11 a.m. COMMUNION "God's way is the best way." 2.30 p.m. Sunday School. The Minister will Speak at : 11 AM. and 7 PM. 3 rm. Sunday School and Mixed Bible Class 4.15 PM, Men's Bible Class Under Mr. Mack Soancs 7 pm, "Up &nd possess it." Mon. 8 p.m. -Young Feo ple's and leadership training. 6.40 P.M. Song Service Wed. 8 pm, = Mid.week ' Service Northminster Everybody Welcome | THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1931 DOOOOOLOOO000000000 DOOOOOOLO00O00000000L000 Sunday Services in The Oshawa Churches Evangel Tabernacle Services of Evangel Tabernacle on Sunday will be conducted by Pastor J. T, Ball. Northminster United "What Does the Jew Seek?" This is the subject of the sermon which Rev. A. M, Irwin will preach at the morning service of North- minster United Church te-morrow. St. George's Anglican Services at St. George's Angli- can Church, to-morrow, will be conducted by Canon C. R. dePen- cier, the rector, In the evening Miss M. Elston will contribute the solo "Son of My Soul," Christian Science 'Jesus Christ" {s the subject which will be discussed at the reg. ular service of the First Church of Christ Scientist to-morrow. King Street United Special importance is attached to the services of King Steet Unit- ed . Church to-morrow. 'In the morning the pastor, Rev. C. I. Cragg will preach, his subject to be 'James the Enthusiast." At this service Rev. Mr, 'Cragg will make a very important statement and a full attendance of members ig ro. quested, A song service will be held in the evening for fifteen min utes preceding the regular service at which Rev. W. E. Millson, of (Toronto, will speak. pus gy ' orges ANGLICAN Cor, Bagot and Centre Sta CANON C. R dePENCIER M.A, Organist and Cholrmaster Matthew Gouldburn, AC LM 8 am -- Holy Communion 11 wm~Morning Prayer. 2.80 p.m, = Sunday School 7 pme--Solo Elston, *'Son by Miss M. of My Soul" Wednesday, 8 p.m--Len- ten Service Confirmation class In "the Chapel, Friday 8 P.M. o_o. nited Church |= . Manvel! 1rwin. B.A, Evangel Tabernacle Greta St. "hone 82084 200 King St. West J. T. BALL, Pastor flesidence, 21 Park Hoad South, Phone 19214, A fs a.m~~What does the Jew Seek? 2&3 p.m. =sSunday School ! Sessions, ! {7 pmm~Evening Worship. I | 'fhe Pastor at both Services | i Monday 8 pm -- Young y ar H i Pe at i ~ A cordial welcome to all. 10 a.m.~Sunday School 11 am~~Communion 7 pm~Evangelistic Good singing, helpful Sere vice, the Regular Services will be held on Tuesday awl Thursday at 8 p.m, Cederdale \ United Church | ev. G. W, Irvine BA, BD. | 11 a.m. subject f | Pentecostal Holiness Church . "Attitudes toward 811 Celing Street i > i'astor G. Legge tn Char.. 2.30, sunday School 7 pt. subject # ! . | 10 a.m. Sunday School \ 11 am. = Pastor G. Legge 7 p.m.~Pastor G. Legge A cordial welcome to all, Tues. 8 p.m. -- Prayer Meeting Fri. 8 p.m, -- Bible Study Everyone Welcome Christ Church (ANGLICAN) y Hillcroft & Mary Sts. K. B. PATTERSON, M.A. Incumbent Second Sunday in Lent 8 a.m~--Holy Communion 11 am. -- Holy Com- municn and Sermon. 2.30 p.m.--Sunday School. 7 p.m.--Evensong. Rev. 8S. C. Jarrett of Holy Trinity. j i ------_--_------_--, tor LEY, Church ANGLICAN REV. 8. C. JARRETT, Incumbent, 80 Fairbanks St. 8 a.m.--Celebration of Holy Communion. 11 a.m, =~ Choral Eu- charist. Second Sermon on 'Temptations of our Lord." 3.00 p. m, -- Sunday School. Grace Lutheran Services of Grace Lutheran Church, to-morrow, are to bo con ducted by Rev, A. C. Hahn, the pas- tor, Oshawa Pentecostal Holiness Pastor G. Legge is to be fin charge of the worship at Oshawa Pentecostal IMoliness Church to- morrow, Knox Presbyterian Rev. Duncan Munro, the pastor, will conduct both services of Knox *®resbyterian Church on Sunday. Holy Trinity Anglican Rev. 8. C. Jarrett, the rector, will preach his second sermon on "The Temptations of Our Lord" at the morning service of Holy Trini: ty Anglican Church to-morrow. In the evening, Rev. R, B. Patterson, rector of Christ Church, will be the speaker, Centre Street Umiced Services of Centre Street United Church will bo conducted by the pastor, Rev, W. P. Fletcher. In the morning he will speak on "God's Way is the eBst Way," while in the evening his address is to be "Up and Possess It." Christ Anglican Services at Christ { Church to-morrow will ducted by Rev. R. B. rector, Rev. 8, CO. Jarrett, rector of Holy Trinity Anglican Church, will gpeak in the evéning. Anglican be con= Patterson, the Simcoe Street United "The Vision Splendid" is subject of the germon which bo preached by the pastor, Rev, I Harston, at the morning service of Simcoe Streét United Church morrow. In the evening Rev, Mr, i i 7 p.m.--Evensong and Sermon. Rev. R. B. Patterson of Christ Church Wed., 7.30 -- Special Lenten Services. Address on the GRACE Lutheran Church MASONIC BUILDING Rev, A. C. Habu 154 Albert St, SUNDAY, MARCH 1st. 9 30 a.m Sunday School. 10.40 a.m. ~Morning Wor- ' ship, Lenten service, Thursday, 7.80 p.m, ALL ALE CORMALLY WELCOME { Hurston will gpeak on "Bread Line tin the Luxury Fattened Land." Cedarvdale United Rev, G. WW, Irvine, the | will preach at both seryvicey | dardale United Church to-morrow | In the morning his subject will } | "Attitudes Toward Relizion' whil | the evening he will | "Excuses," First Baptist Church The ordinance of the lL. supper will be observed at close of the morning services ol | First Baptist Church to-morrow Rev, Ray MeGregor, of Montreal is to preach at both servic | rd St Andrew's United "Beliold" is tho subjest of the ermon which Rev, I, J, Maxwell the pastor, will preach at the mor: Ing wervice of St. Andrew's United Church to-morrow, In the event his sermon wil be on "An Inter esting Message from an Unknown Book." Albert Bitter St. and United "The Sweot In Life' the pastor, Rev. KE. C. preach at the morning Albert Street United Church to morrow In the evening hig ser mon will be on "The Magnetism of Jesus,' will of Moore, service Gospel Tabernacle Dr. M. H. Blandin, of will preach at both services of the Gospel Tabernacle on Sunday Calvary Baptist "The Ministry of the Seventy" fx the subject of the sermon which Rev. Paul B. W. Gelatt, the pastor will preach at the morning service of Calvary Baptist Chureh to-mor row. In the evening his sermon Man's Life." The Church Must Be Beautiful Say what we like about one place being as sacred as another, and about God's presence not be- ing confined to any location, the race has not developed the {dea of the sanctuary and held to it through all the centirfes for noth- ing. There ought to be, and there Is, a difference between a chureh and a concert hall or recreation room. The place where 'God ix worshipped in public by a band of people united at thelr deepest is a sacred place. IL ought to he a beautiful place. It need not he elaborate or expensive--u good church can be built as quickly and as reasonably as an ugly one but it ought to be.a place where it is patural and easy to think of God; a place where thoughts of goodness and truth will have a set- ting of beauty; a place in which one could be alone without either boredom or fear; a place around which----apart from minister or people---gacred and gladsome mem. ories could cling throughout the years, The Coming Kingdom The return to Canada of Presi dent C. J. L. Bates on furlough from Japan has drawn greater ul- tention to the Kingdom of God Movement in Jupan. Wherever Dr. Bates goes the Movement dnd its leader, Toyohiko Kagawa, pro- vide the theme of his powerful ad- dresses, This 18 on a par with Ka- gawa's action in commending the work of foreign missionaries, in- man, "80 many miselonaries are do ing wonderful work," rald Kaga- is Norman of Shinshu---everybody in Shinshu knows him. « + They have forgoften that Dy. Norman is 4 Capadin, They || similar testimony to the Christian to- | pastor, | of Co- | preach ov | the | is the subject of the sermon whieh | Toronto | will be on "The Missing Link In al cluding our own Dr. Daniel Nor-| wa-in an important addreps. "There | BOOOO0O0O00000000000000000000 « 5000000080000 000C B000000000 DOOOO0000 | All the Churches S vices in the Cit Churches | Bid You a earty Welcome love him go much. The influence A ------, of his life is Christianity. When I visited his district thousands of young men wanted to be Chris- tlans. Why? Because Sorman is there." : In an interview Kagawa gave Nnfluence of the institution, Kwa- nsel Gakuin, over which Dr, Dates presides, While the Church continues to produce personalities and institu- tions of such quality she has in her hands the most powerful weapons that could be desired and her in- fluence is sure, The Church World -Wide A conference on "Permanent Pre. SIMCOE ST. UNITE . "THE HOUSE OF FRIENDSHIP" Minister, Rev. E. Harston, LL.B. Phone 148. Asst.--Rev, J, 8S. I. Wilson, B.A,, B.D. "THE VISION EE, 1 AM, 8 PM. SUNDAY SCHOOL 7 PM. | Rabbi Eisendrath's Challenge "Bread lines in this luxury fattened land." The Minister will preach at both services, Good Singing, Fine Fellowship, Helpful Services. PLENDID" ventitives of Unemployment' was held during the latter part of Jan- uary in Washington, D.C. For two days Catholle, Jewish and Protest- ant leaders discussed the subject not from the cconomic standpoint alone, but mainly its ethical bear- ings. The chairman, Mr, James Myers of the George Washington University, represented the Federa Council of Churches; Rabbi Edward is coming home on furlough. or. | W. GG. Jordan, professor emeritus | of Hebrew in Queen's University, Kingston, has just passed his eigh- tieth birthday. Quite a number of prominent Queen's men in To ronto recofitly gave him a banquet at the Ontario Club. The bap. tism of Chiang Kal Shek, President Israel, and Rev. Father McGowan, of China, wis reported some weeks were also present. The newspapers | ,., Now, his wite who has been of the Cupitol-did not pay much at |, eypigtjan for years, has written a tention to the mecting, a8 NY |jeptar to Dr. Donald MacGillivray, waited results. These will appear | "piel she expresses the hope when reports have been considered |p, peo may soon return to Shang- by the varfous organizations repres| pi giv new missionaries of the sented, namely, "The Social Action | {v1 aq Church of Canada have ar [ Department of. the National €atho-| Good cately at Faoshaw China. [lic Welfare Conference," the "S0-|mpay gre: 'Dr. and Mrs, Ross, of cla Justice Commission Central Blyth: Dr. and Mrs. Wilford, ot Conference of American Rabbis," | oj} springs; and Dr. and Mrs. J. E. and the "Social Service Conimis 'Thompson, of Toronto. sion ol PFed-Council of Churches." « 8 I'hey considered unemployment due to laying off help seasonally, machinery rapidly replacing The news from Scotland informs the public that the ministers of the Church of Scotland are to receive wn, and cyeles of good and bad ag stipend not less than £300 and [times, The following were piven fy pangs, It wag feared that ow- | ag a fact, A men in Canada har- |. (5 depression, it mizht fall be- | vested 400 acres of wheat et u lu low that fizure, but the state of the [ whilo he has un brother dn New |eyyag fy remarkably good. Witn | York City trying to find food for |e eyeat Church of Scotland now {the hungry. lon its way, there are to he some * changos put into effect at the com- ing sembly. In the records min. isters with a D.D., are to be desig- | nated "Dr." whereas other 'Doce | tors, such as Ph.D, and LL.D, are [to have the said letters annexed to [their names. Lower degrees are | not 10 ne 2439. hat tha term "Rov." | shall be used as a designation. The Home Mission Committee of that { Church has been carrying on a |campalgn of Evangelism. in the ol | Buckhaven and Methil districts of {the Church of Scotland; Dr. Donald | pireshire. The local clergy have Prager, a far-famed missionary; Dr. hoon assisted by ministers ghited i Adolt Keller of Geneva, etary | for guch special work, and the re- of the Central Bureau of Kvangell | yyjty have been encouraging. Bish- A very important conference amely, on "Christian Steward | «hip," fs to meet in June in Edin mrgh, Scotland. The sessions will begin with a service in St. Giles Cathedral, the rest of them in Old | Avaembly Hall of tho Church of <cotland, It is both International nd Interdenominational, and dy a notable lst of rpeakers ha heen published, Among them are | Dr. John White, Ex-Moderator cal Church of Furope, and Dri lyn Deane of the Scottish Episcopal | Crawford and McConaughy of Am- ('hyreh in Aberdeen, has heen men. | fericn. The International Scecstary | 5,04 for the vacancy at the See | is Mr. T. Collet of Edinburgh and .¢ Glasgow. | [| Rev, W, J. Smi ( ' ------ | the International Association. In The Oxford Group movement is | it general way the conference Will | ytendily gaining ground. A meet- | deal with Stewardships as the prin. | (ne was held a short time ago in| ciple underlying all Christion Hv | (he hall of Westminster School, ing, service and pivine. The philoso- | London, Eng., to hear reports roi | phy of life ag taught bv Jesus | wopgors, The chalr was occupled | Christ will be studied and applied | vy Sir Lynden Macaggey, and among | [to the acquisition of wealth and Its | those present were Dr. Douglas | pxpenditure, Adam, well known Congregational . [mimister at the Highbury Quadrant Tho eyes of the Anglicans of) ('hureh, and Sir Evan Spicer, Two | Capada have been turning with af-| of the speakers were a son of the ection and gratitude to Winnipeg | gigshop of Hankow, and anoiher | ind the Diocese of Rupert's Land. | on of the Bishop of Newark Lv. | | On Jan. 31st, after filling the oftee | S.A.) The work in South Africa of Primate. for over twenty years, | wag reported on hy -Dr. Brookes, | Archbishop Matheson resigned. No | professor of political economy, 're- | | Canadian hag done greater honor | Lovia, Hifico the three teams visit- [to an office, or of the community | ed that country fn 1927, the cause! in which he was born, than thi* | has been taken up with wonderful | talwart of the prairie. He is a|ypesults. The movement has spread | on of one of the Selkirk settlers io Germany. In June last a large who came from the Parish of Kil- | jouse-party was held at Oxford, douan in the Highlands of Scotland | when about 500 people from ali | during the years 1811 to 1815. | parts of the world were present. lumbering altogether 270. That | Pastor Laun, who had visited Eng- he is a good scholar, n cultured and | land to study the "Copec" Organi- eloquent preacher, and an able ec- | zation, was among those who at cleslgstic are facts and speak well | {onded. He has since founded { for the type of clergyman Who Groups in his own country, one of foufided the first churches and | which has in its membership rep- schools in the West. Rev. Toun | pegentatives of the nobility, and West, an Anglican, ralled from | professions. England in May, 1820, landed at -- --t York Factory in August, and September started in a canoe on a | Journey of 800 miles for the Red | River. He held his first service at | | wt. Douglas on Oct, 14, 1820, It IIs Rev. Wm, Cochrane, however, | | who left the greatest mark on the 4 | community in the early days, ef STN fs buried beside § Andrew's-at- . aie the-rapide, where the largo stone | Duffield Parishioners Have church fs a land-mark. That bis | | torie building 1s roon to he reno- | No Longer Excuse For Not vitted, | : The Presbyterian, a weekly re-| Attending Church | Hglous paper, printed in Philadel- ao . phia, has just passed one hundred London.--*"The Bus Beats the | years of service. It has during all | Devil" is the heading of an article its history upheld tlie banner oi in the Anglican parish magazine of | orthodoxy, and on several oecca-| Duffield, Derbyshire, which recalls | glons resisted tempting financial | legend that the building of the | offers to sell, because of | ehureh was commenced in the cen- that fear - that its witness | tre of the village, but every morn to the old faith might be |ing it was found that the stones lost. There have been fourtcen|had been moved by Satan and de- editors, but a number of them oc |Posited on the present sito of the leupied the chair only for a spor. |church, near the river, The Vicar time, The men who made fit a and church wardens finally gave household word throughout the!in, and the church was bufit where Church were Dr. Wm. M. Engles | it now stands, S80 for 1,000 (thirty-three years), Dr. Matthew | Years, Rev. Dr. Irwin, the new 15, Grier (thirty-eight years), Dr, | Vicar of Duffield, gays in the maga- 8: A Mutehmore (twenty-five zine article in question, "'some years), and Dr. W. W. MeKiuney | parishioners have made distance | (twenty-one years), The nameg|an excuso for staying away from | "Alexander" has been connected church to the Devil's joy, but the with the paper for the past thirty- present vicar hus outmanoeuvred lone years, in the first place when | him. For three halfpence any | Rey, "Dr. It. Alesander and hig two | parishioner can be transported [ons became the owners, and Migs | from his own door to that of the Clara A. Alexander, another meni- | church or back in a comfortable bev of the family, fy still on the! bus." The chureh {8 about a mile | utaff, For the past twenty yeurs|from the village, and the vicar has | Ilys pages have resounded with con- | Inaugurated a bus service for the flict against Modernism, by the |conveyance of parighioners to and fearless pens of Dr, D. 8. Kennedy, | from the Sunday services. Dr. Ir- and his associate, Dr. 8. (. Craig. | Win himself has been acting as con- [he latter has started a new paper, | ductor. but he hag now relinquish "Christianity To-day," his succes- | ed the post to choir boys. gor being Dr. W. C. Robinson, | - v | MEMORIAL TO RUPERT BROOKE Dr. Frank H. Russell, with i London,--A memorial to Rupert record of thirly-seven years as o! Drooke (1887-1916), English poet missionary in India behind him, | who on the way to Gallipoli in the has returned to the work. Tor | Naval Brigade id the World War some time in the future he will [dled of blood poisoning at sea in a take the chair of theology in the | French hospital ship, will be un- Jhited College at Indore, and he- | veiled on the Greek Island of Bky- feve Principal John T. Taylor, who ros on Easter Sunday, April 5, The see i yy hh ll ws, Rev. Paul B. W. Gelatt, Pastor . Young People's Meeting You are cordially invited to spe aad oki 11 AM. : "The Ministry of the Seventy' Tem, "THE MISSING LINK in a Man's Life" Song' Service starts 6.45 p.m. SUNDAY SCHOOL 3 p.m,, CLASSES FOR ALL. Prayer Meeting Wednesday 8 p.m. Children's meeting Friday 7 Corner Centre and John Streets Monday 8 p.m. p.m. visit our new Church Home, | | The Gospel will preach at 11 MESSAGES OF EVERYBODY Tr --~ ATHOL ST. WEST. SUNDAY, 1st. MARCH Dr. M. H. BLANDIN ] OF TORONTO SUNDAY SCHOOL AT 3 p.m. ' WELCOME Er---- Tabernacle | 1 am. and 7 p.m. POWER AND LOVE 5° fn gp vp te crs memorial is the work of the Athen fan sculptor Michel Tombros and was cast in bronze in Belgium, The ceremony will be an Festival of Poetry in connection | with which a cruise in Greece rus | the ..aster holidays will be orga- | nized. Poety from Great European countries, as well as poets from Oriental countries and the United States will attend the ceremony. The committee having the matter in hand wus founded in Muay, 1929, in Calro, under the aus pices of the Belgian Literary group, "La Lanterne Sourde," which had an active branch in Egypt. SOCIETY MUCH IN PUBLIG EYE Lord's Day Observance Or- ganization Celebrates Centenary London.--It is curious that the Lord's Day Observance Society should have celebrated its centen- ary in the very month when itis most in the public eye over Sun- day cinemas and theatres. Daniel Wilson, Bishop of Calcutta, who founded it in 1851, was an out-and- out Evangelical. who had had his Oxford training at what was then an Evangelical---and North-coun- try-stronghold, St. Edmund Hall; but the Society is not exclusively Church of England. For many years its headquarters have been at Lord's Day House, a fine old 18th century building in Red Lion Square, just off High Holborn. The square is one of the smallest in Bloomsbury, and among its titles, to fame it once housed Rosseiti, Willlam Morris' first fac- tory, and the first man in London to use an umbrella, Now-adays a score of societies find a home there, and it is strange that one of them, only a few doors away from Lord's Day House, should be the Nationa: Sunday League, the L.D.0.8.'s dead- ly foe, which arranges Sunday con- certs and Sunday outings. THE WHEAT QUESTION A conference has been arranged in Paris on the matter of wheat marketing. Its object is to make the continent of Europe self-sup- porting in wheat. It is proposed to establish minimum prices, and European countries which are short of wheat pledge themselves to buy from other European coun- tries which have surpluses, M. Briand Js sponsoring the scheme. Russia excluded from the Con- ference du objection on the part of France. The British Gov- ernment will oppose the scheme, which seeks to close European mar- kets to Canadian and Australian wheat, except in years of abnor- mal shortage. It is pointed out by London newspapers that Mr. Ben- nett recently announced that France 'would purchase lareo sue plies of Canadian wheat although other European countries wuien I"'rante has invited to the Confer- ence have surpluses for sale. There in, growing dissatisfaction with customs barriers in all countries snd a corresponding inclination to International ||| Britain, ||! Greece, France, Belgium and other | look upon free trade as a more nat. ural and a more Christian and al First Baptist Churc KING ST. EAST 11.00 a.m, MORNING WORSHIP Ordinance of the Lord's supper at the close of this Service. 3.00 pam. Church School 7.00 pm EVENING WORSHIP Rev. Roy McGregor of The Madison Ave. Baptist Church, Montreal, will preach at both services. Wednesday 8 p.m. PRAYER MEETING "WE INVITE YOU TO WORSHIP WITH US "Christian Science" First Church of Christ, Sclentist 64 Colborne Street East Morping Service at 1! a.m. unday School 12.10 p.m. SUNDAY, MARCH 1st. SUBJECT 'Jesus Christ' Wednesday Meeting, 8 p.m. Including testimonies of Healing through Christian Science. You are cordially {uvited to at- joud he services and to make use of the Free Public Reading Room where the Bible and authorizes Christian Sclence literature may be read, borrowed or purchased and periodicals subscribed for. Open on Tuesdays, Thursdays asd Sate urdays from 2 to 6 p.m. ' much less dangerous policy be~ tween the nations, WOLVES MENACE MOOSE Edmonton, Alta.--Timber wolves in the upper valley of Hay river 6500 miles north of Edmonton, are taking a heavy toll of moose with the result that these animals are banding together in large herds for protection, stated Walter Rutter, a veteran prospector who recently re- turned from an extensive foray in the north country. Lack of snow has ruined pros- pects for the trapper in the region visited by Mr. Rutter. Few of the trappers will hardly make expenses, he declared. a ------

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