Lake Ontario Trout and Whitefish, Fresh age ig ic 4 r : Many minds will leap in eagerness to this lesson, whieh more than DOMINION FISH 00. twenty million persons will study si- oe Wt emer [liaocus ror kosoves 6a Fruit §& Candy Store ly, as a discussion of the truth for Sng If you want to have a good time | and social heipfulness.'t It will b& @& dull teacher indeed who slavishly followes the old method of conning, verse by verse, only the one assigned portion of the inspired word. This lesson, lke the entire six months' se- ries, is topical and meant to be so considered. Every days newspdper has living comment and illustration '{ {upon our present theme . Our world fs bent upon realizing a4 new era of fraternity . Some call it Bolshevism (which is only a {ghastly imitation of the genuine ar- {ticle), some call it social ameliora~ ition, and others term it the growth' . © {ot the kingdom of heaven on earth. DR. De VANS FRENCH PILLS 70% |Nobody fs so remote from the day's mlatiig #1 for Women. 35 ¢ box or t...» for currents of news as not to tnder- QL ah ail Drug Stores, of viled x stand that this has emerged not ofily { rel hich. THE Mam. as the war after the war, but also Lost Ontario. SOP YF M j Restores as the real fruition of the = grest PhOSPHONOL FOR EN. Vits 08 | struggle. We fought to make all otha Tone at a eo Lucrssses STF Iiien free; we find we must likewise " fi borg ' To for BR res Jou. thoft reesios | help them to achievé brothérhood. i price. "Ts SconecL DRu Co., 1. Catharines, | Prugsianism has #5 go, in its social Sol ) » (and industrial, as well as in its po- Sola 8: Mahoad's Drug Store. litical and military phases. Thers was more involved in the war than anybody foresaw. the times, Here we may find light from the clear lamp of Scripture pon the one outstanding problem of our day, the question of fraternity 'on plenics or holidays get your fresh seasonahle Fruit and Candy from the Star Fruit aad Candy Store. 68 Princess Street. Phone 273, Board Canadg Food License: Fruit, 9-020; Candy, 11-418 - Out of War's Fellowship. It has often béen regretfully ob- served by the British that a change was noticeable in soldiers going home on leave. Ag they drew nedr to England something of the battle- born simplicity and directness and open comradeship slipped off, and the old constraints of clvilization's artifieialities took their place. Which visualizes a present problem; inamely, how are we to preserve in civil life the nobler characteristics of trench and camp? In the war men learned the value of the common man, and his essential worth with re spect to the great qualities. That was a comradeship of simplicity and sincérity and justice and mutual de- | pendence. { Then was born an endless fellow- ship; a soldier solidarity will per- dist after the war, and will be the principal factor in re-shaping the general scheme of things. There have been countless signs already that our warriors 'want to improve upon the old system of caste and strife d ' inequity; they seem determined tio get through with aristgcracy and ex- ploitation ,and to achieve a genuine democracy, The boys coming home are bent on brotherhood. # So/is every other réd-hlodded man and woman, Even thé poor crea- ture---there are fewer uh by far, since the war---who would rather be exclusive than simply human, is obliged to accept the new programme of brotherhood, for thes whole world has set its mind upon it. Frater. nity i¢ coming, either' tn the Ameri caf and Christian way, or in the Russian and savage way. The world's turmoil will not cease until a far fuller degree of 'liberty, frater- nity ,equality" has béen achieved. From the midst of the ominous uns rest of the Orient I write these por tentous words, with a full sense of their seriousness. A Programe and a Peril, People-dre panieky about the per- il of social upheaval, and with réa- san; for the programme of Bolshe- Kingston Cement Products Factory Makers of Hoflow Damp Proof Cement Blocks, Bricks, Bills, Lintles, and Drain* Tile, also Grave Vaults, And all kinds of Ornamental Work. Factory, cof. «f Charles and _ Paurick, streets. Phone 730W, £ Mzgr., H. F. NORMAN FORD CARS FOR SALE We have a few used Ford Oars which we can sell reason. able. All automobile repale guaranteed. { work Central 885 King St. Phone 2188 rr er Ar Amn See SPECIALS FOR SATURDAY Sait Pass"! shaiee\uontern BS Tom Deni ate an : + 0.85, 400 Ih, QUICK'S CHOICE Western Meat Mar- ket az CLERGY STRERT mulgated in all lands, is a thing of ill-will, of class consciousness, of de- ation' + ligio is hideous tion and irre ¢ ous menace of Bolshevism, "however, should not hecloud the fairer pros- pect of a nobler condition of life, 'with more of justice and om and real friendliness, to which the hurt and hungry hearts of humanity look forward. In avoiding the false, lest we turn aside from the true. Fraternity, the spirit of brother hood between all men, is a divine goal. wills it. The Bible teaches'<if. True Christianity pro- mates it. \ It has its rise in the spirit and words of Jesus. Our gravest present peril is that the new social impulse will depart from the spirit of its Author and er. aA It will not if Christians ring true. Once all the disciples of Jesus stand , § |steadily and strongly for th 8) i} |and undeniable teaching of Ser! ture, "One is your M " cut hard wood and J. Sowards Coal Co. FRATERNITY, REAL AND BOCUS The International Sunday School Lesson "Christian Fellowship."---phji. By William T. Ellis, i 8tereotyped phrases to make THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG © | . -- For . July 27th Is 4:10-20. some of her "boys." These infor- mal, spontanéous, happy gatherings in Christian fellowship are the very antithesis of formal and exclusive social functions. f There is a spurious sort of fellow- ship which is seeking to palm itself off upon the world at the present time. Russians call one another "Taverish," or "comrade," but | per- sonally have never been in an atmo- sphere of greater suspicion, hostile ity and unconcealed and ruthless selfishness than when I spent peril- [OUS weeks in Russia under Bolshes vist dominon. t takes more than real fellowship. There is needed a com- mon spirit, 4 common interest, & common allegiance. The best fel- lowship is a fellowship--loyalty to one great Leader. * That is why the people who follow Christ are in truth as wall 48 In name the truest fellow- h ship known on earth. Why should Wwe be content with any lesser or more artificial ties? ~~ When we pro- mote and practise this world-wide fellowship of Christians, making our brotherhood real in every relation. ship of life, we are doing most to fulfill the world's greatest present expectation. The Goodly Company of Helpers. Hold fast to war memories. How Slotausly our communities were lefided "into unity and dotivity fer the service of soldiers and sailors. Women forgot their social ambitions aid men thelr political and business disagreements, In the glow of a great patriotic ardor petty distine- tions weré merged; there were no 86ts or cliques; we were just Ameri- cane, doing our best for our "boys and our country. Why cannot we maintain that splendid tradition? We have an adequate 'occasion in the social cris{s that is upon the world.i§ Our Chris- tian faith gives us a sufficient mo- tive. The need is greater even than that of our service men. For the sake of our country, for the sake of our democracy, for the sake o a world' in turmoil, for the sake of our Christianity, why may we not, defi- nitely and assiduously, cultivate a new spirit of fellowship in every community, and among all the churches? Our religion is at stdke, as well as our social peace, There is clearly in gight for all of us some- thing better than the old, petty, ex- clusive and selfish social relation- ship which' once constituted . our "set," or our "crowd" Suppose Wwe accept all the. children of the Heavenly Father as our fellows? And on a. basis of helpfulness, That note sounds throughout our lesson. Friends of Paul had fel lowshig with him in his affliction; and they ministered to his needs When we gét ready to go the limit fn being good helpers, good "fellows," we shall be among those who are to redeem our time for its new era of Christian_hsotherhood. <The Laté W. Wallace H "Om July 10th death cated ; Wallace Hicoek, , in hig sixty fourth year. Deceased had been in falling health for the past few years bit wag not thou to be in a Ser- fous condition until*the last few months," From that time he kept gradually getting weaker until on vism, which is being definitely pro- i: wlsiutegration, despoila- [p Thursday he passed into the Great Réyond. Mr. Hicock was a prosper- ous farmer esteemed by all who knew him. He wes a Methodist in religion and a man of sterling ghar- icter. 'He has loft to mourn a wife [and four children: Mrs, W. B, Mus- d, Barons, Alta.; Harold and Jes- of 8 la, oj lurst; Mrs. Imerson Mrs. W. Cockri Bliza' Hicock, Tamworth her y's Bay; H, Leeds, and Miss ley's Bay, From , orth. nly 29. and dau * Brown Mis. Robert andl in tp J. Pails, ¥. W nies, at W. toon, Sask C6. Coxall and § Bello | burnishing tool, (Tag to a bull" Mor friends at | POPE "at Beaver Lake. | TWELVE MISTAKES. Ome Dozen Popular Fallacies rs ing Good Values. i + Most of us are wont to accept the | often-stated as proven truth in | dietetic matters. eo common fal- | lacles about food are repeated from | generation to gehefation. Scientific } analysis disproves many supposi- | tiops. Here are instances:-- t f. It is often said that bee! is | moré wourishing than bread and | cheese. There is, however, far more nutriment in ong shilling's worth of" bread and cheese than ia of | the value of ong shilling. Lean beet | is very inferior to theese as nutri- | ment. i 2. Skim milk is supposed to be | valueless as food. This is an error. | Skim milk taken with bead comsti- | tutes a sustaining meal. { 3. Most persons imagine that but- | ter is eo fably more mourishing than margarine. The fact is that the | best fresh butter and the best kinds | of margarine contain almost exactly | the same amount of nutriment per | pound, 4, It is believed that costly cheese is the most nourishing. 'The cheaper | cheeses are mostly richer in proteid | than the expensive sorts: 6. That potatoes are a cheaper | food than bread is incorrect. If po- | tates are eaten as substitutes for | wheaten bread the quantity must be | very large and the cost will not be less than that of bread. 6. We are often told that oatmeal is not so nutritive as wheatmeal. On the contrary, oats ¢ontain more fatty ingredients than wheat asd sre the most nutritious of grain foods. 4 7. Most people think that ride is indigestible. Experiments prove that well cooked rice is easily digested. 8. Maize is thought to be inferior to wheat as humah food. Mise un- doubtedly contains mere fat thah wheat. 9. A Dover sole is esteemed as ore valuablé food than a dried herring. Generdlly Speaking, cured fish is more nourishing (han fresh. A kipperéd herring is better food than a sole of first quality. 10. Nuts are regarded as dessert dishes and not as nourishing food Brazil nuts, almonds, and walnuts have 50 per cent. of fat and are very good foods, Butter made from nuts {8 nearly as nourishing as milk butter, 11. It is thought that fruit is not a food. This depends on the kind o fruit. Dates are a staple diet in parts of the east, and figs and raisins in # dry state are very nutritive. 12. Tea and coffeé are supposed to be "sustaining" Neither of these beverages contains nutriment. Milk and sugar give a sill food value to the ordinary cup of tea or coffee. Burnishing Silver. A machine for burnishing silver, the invention of a Swiss citizen, is now exténsively used in many large hotels, restaurants and club-rodms. It is so sitiple that éven an inex- periencéd person can operate it successfully, : The silverware is placed in a Hinder immersdd in a soap Solute an Sontaning A quantity of smal steel balls and pins. The cylinder is slowly rotatéd by a motor or any other suitable source of AS the cylinder turps, the niinute balls and pips, each constituting a small and dirt, and imparting to ts surface "hat high gless and finish which only well-burnished silver. will show, . The small balls and pins are of | several sizes, and as they roll over the silver they reach every corner and every crevice of the most dli- The rae ig a verware as thor-1 oughly as if x sersteh-brush had been used, but there is practieally no abrasion. Ten per cent. of the silver is lost every year in using the teh-brush and buffer, -- Popular etice Monthly, * Red Rag to a Bull, 4 How ma ople know the real meaning of .the ph "Like & red y should a bull, or any other creature, bé enraged when a piece u starlet cloth is flaunted before rig For bulls are a Alone a this. © Sheep, usually n ¢ gentle, will Apparently become trans. : with Tage it they see anything i Sra ar been known to attack a scar Sh In inane German Samoan Islands In South Pacific Ocean Are Small But Interesting o HE German Samoan Islands, for which Néw Zealand is to "hold the mandate, ac- cording to preliminary sum- maries of the peace treaty, are in- teresting. : Samoa, called by former geo- graphiers tHe Navigators Islands, ee from the skill in navigation shown' by its inhabitants, consists of four principal bits of land lyjng in the Squth Pacific, nearly midway between | New Zesland and Hawaii. The nutiber of islands in the group may, by counting the smaller, be in- creased to 11, or even 14, but oAly | Savil, Upelu, Tutuila, and the three Gsually included under the general térm Manua, are important. All are verdure-clad and inhabited, and in appearance and §hape resem- ble immensé green hats, represen tainoug, while the brim or shore is covered with cocoanut palms, bread- fruit, bahdna, and othér tropical trees, which furnish the native food. At some prehiStaric period the peaks of a submerged mountain chain running northeast and south- West have been lifted from the depths of thé ocean by the canoes now long extinct. tions Accumula- of soll brought by heavy rains 6 mountains meet the ever- growing redf, which prevents easy approach to the land except in those Places. white fresh « water streams, Orcing their Wwiy through, fort opénings in the coral barrier. ° Between reef and shore a Jagoon, varying in width from 200 yards to two or three milés, provides a secure highwaf for coast and inter-island traffic. The entire léngth of the group, if Rose Island be included, is little less than 300 miles. The native inhabitants of the islands are of; Polynesian stock and are clearly rela both Hawaii and New Zealand. For practical purposes these natives may bé divided into four classes. At the head stand the chiefs, who are hesi- |. ditary in the s belong to certain fauiilies; but ele tive in that they exercise authority by virtue of titles conferred on them. The Tulafile, talking-man, is their executive officer, who phrases their thoughts in eloquent language, and is frequently the central figure in the district and the source of auth- ority. Below him and above the low. wit class, composed of what are known as the 'common people," are the native teachers and catechists, who wear more clothes and do less Sshting than the rest of the pepula~ nn. There is nothing in the dress or bearing of a high chief which en- able a foreigner to distinguish him, but he is isolated from the rest of thé people By a system of rigid eti- quette. No one may hold up um- la or do certain kinds of work in presence, and a special voca- es Sel apart in which to ad- reps him, 6 common . nai for food, an ete, are booed in his pi % His face, his anger, and other attributes are described in an entirely different set of words from those used for ordinary men. Hedged about as he is, the chief, in his intercourse with persons ot of his rank, Bas come to largely on his "talking wa like his chief, is elected from cer. taln families in whish the office is hereditary.: As a rule, no bie is elected who has not a gift for ora- tory, which is a common talent in Samoa, he powsty and duties of he », men" are considerable They Mrs ihe of much dignity of 8 Ubon & AR of offes with 8 Fort or over ould that they must than themsel ei Soldiets to Buigrate. | jon ibs will not bred * ¢ interior | § the crown beihg moun- | Lumber, Laths and Shingles -- 'good stocks; prompt delivery. * For quality and service, try-- Allan's Lumber Yard Victoria Street. - Phone 1042 Establithed 1870 TWEDDELL'S For all new style, geod wearing Suits $20 up to $45 All Prices Between es uphéaval of vol- | PURE ICE CREAM | SERVE IT FOR LUNOHEQGNS, DINNERS AND SUPPERS Most modern machinery used in making our Ice Cream the ingredients are the best-~nothing but pure créam used. i + Prompt delivery to all parts of the city. Superior Ice Cream Parlor 204 Princess St. téd to the natives of | : HERE can be no question about the urity of Klim. It is made by seppra the butterfat from liquid milk and drying the foed solids, which include protein, into a fine powder by the "spray protéss." No chemieals nor adulterants.are used. . Klim is in powder form within a short time after the liquid milk is re- ceived at the mitk powder plant. Of course, the separ- ated milk for Klim is Justeuzized, This is the best uarantey of safety and does not affect the natural Vi or. Try a tin. Order from. your grocer. Specials For This Week:' Fresh Léttuce, Beets, On- Fresh Seasonable Fruits of fons, Cucumbers and Vege- tables, all kinds arriving daily. Tomatoes, Cucumbers, Ru- 'barb always on hand. fo. 8 GE 80k