Daily British Whig (1850), 31 Jan 1922, p. 13

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T TURSDAY, JANUARY 31, 1002. HE DAILY BRITISH WHIG. To The Voters of Kingston and Portsmouth CONSERVATIVE CANDIDATE ~ William Folger Nickle Political Free Lance. a LIBERAL CANDIDATE . Robert Fawcett Elliott Chairman of the Utilities Commission Mr. Elliott has given his time without reserve and has applied his energies in the services of the people of Kingston in expanding and extending their water, gas and electric plants until to-day they have one of the mostefficient and best managed plants in the whole country. Even in the face of ever rising prices the electric and water rates have been re- duced until these necessities are within the reach of all the people. -- The man who has served you so well at home is the man to serve you in the Legislature at Toronto, / VOTE FOR ELLIOTT AND STABILITY rte r------ selfish ends. The story is the first | | | Always in opposition to all political parties. Opportunity knocked at his door in 1917 when the Citizens of Kingston in no uncertain terms gave him a mandate to proceed to Ottawa. How did he re- quite that trust? By differing with all political parties and resigning before his term was half completed, ; Weighed in the balance of political life and found wanting. His opportun- ity has gone, never to return. ------t on Monday, so ft was fearned by a | Witig reporter, and it ds stated that | they handled their sticks even bet- | ter than they do their hose, while / 5 | photoplay written directly for the Newlin Burt. | of a] has | screen by Katharine House Peters plays the role lumber camp foreman who known only the association of men | and fs dumb in the presence of the | women he loves, Allan Forest as al Theatrical Tonight "Boob McNutt." The many lovers of musical com- | their speed is on a par with the |speed of the fire horses. The rail | birds declared that when the firemen | and Kingston's "finest" stack up | World of Sport The Kingston Curlers in Montreal about 5.30 o'clock. In Def tro | years past the team would leave on | eat the De ters Friday. The reason for the change is | Th NE a jon account of the financial conditions | 2: The Sings Susans ere tie wise [at the univetsity. The athletic boar; ' mers o e games played with the |. been put to a great expense in | roit curlers at the local rink o P : R| Dl building the new rink and every ef- day afternoon ang evening by a | ; to oy MO0re of 41 to 38. The visiting curiers | =° "608 made to save money. | @frived dn the city on Monday after- Policemen Stirred Up) n8- | ters on Tuesday morning Ahat thy ston rinks skipped by F. Waugh and firemen had. declared that they cou'd | | 8B. R. Bailey. Skip Waugh won from put ft all 'over the policemen at a Skip Duftield by a score of 10 to 4, | game of hockey, and as a result tha nd Skip S. R. Bafley won from Sk JD | ""cops are right on their ear over the N. R. Cornwall by a score of 11 to 8 matter, and say they are ready to In the evening games the Kingston take on Chief Armsirong's 'smokes fink skipped by M. P. Reid lost to N. eaters" during their spare time, The Cornwall by a Acore of 12 10 9, J, F. | firemen had a practice match on Mon- Macdonald's rink of Kingston also [day, and it 1s stated that when She | met defeat by a soore of 14 to 11. The | gong sounded was sounded for the | Visiting curlers left on the midnigit [end of the first period, the fireman | train for the west. H. Travers whol... o: me station, tuinking there : on one of the Detroit rinks |... ne This seems rather hard ta | Wis formerly manager of one of the believe, but nevertheless they say it | banks in Napanee. The rinks were: is true. The policemen are busy fig- uring on their lineup. "Tom" Mul- | ' Afternoon Games, linger is slated for goal, and is to be] Kingston. provided with a suit of fly paper to | 4. B. McLeod J. Turnbuil help stop all the shots. "Tom" will | + A. McRae Dr rH. Morley (yum the. note like Ho.watmcs all | » H. MontgomeryH. Travers evil-doers. The police have a star ia | F, Waugh D. B. Duffield 'he person of ome, Casterton, and | ~--skip, 10 --skip, 4 they are pinning their faith on him | to lead the team to victory. Then | they have the celebrated Clark broth- ers, Lesslie and Fred, for the defence, with Constable Hornbeck es an all round man with experience in some | of the big town leagues, not to forget | "Nick" Tifumerman, Lesslic Arm strong, Fitzgerald and Vernon Camp- bell, all good stickholders and ast | men. Detroit, J. Phiitaken J. R. Shaw Dr. T. Tilbals N. Cornwall --akip, 8 Total 12 J, Mcllquham H. A. Tofleld [ & W. Dyde . 8. R. Bailey «skip, 11 Total 21 -3 Evening Games, Kingston. T. J. Rigney A. E. Ross H. Angrove M. P. Reid --skip, 9 Detroit. J. Phittaken J. R. Shaw Dr. T. Tilbals N. Cornwall ~--uskip, 12 Hockey Results, Hamilton Tigers 4, Argos 3, Canadfan Soo 10, Calumet 1. 0. H. A. Junior, Trentod 6, Picton 8. Lindsay 9, Lakefield 2. i J, Turnbull P. D, Lyman Dr, W. H. Morley J. M. Farrell ED. B. Duffield A. W. McLean . H. Travers J. F. Macdonald -akip, 14 ~--akip, 11 Total 26 Total 20 Bill Box Out for Season. | It is very likely that Bill Box, | mainstay of the Kitchener O.H.A. senjors, will be out of the game for the rest of the season. The injury | to Box's foot in the Granite game in | Toronto last Friday night may neces- i sitate the placing of the limb in a cast. Two X-rays were made, gne showing a broken bone, while the other disclosed no apparent breaks, Kingston Defeated Belleville. The Kingston junfor rinks skipped FE By J. Matheson and B, C. Gilder- Sleeve defeated the Belleville curlers 1. the Central Ontario curling {eague 4 at the local rink on Mou- ove ming by a score of 37 "0 29. Skip Matheson won from Skip Me- Ourdy by a ecore of 17 to 16 and F, C. Otidersleeve won from Hanrdigg by 20 to 13. It had ed that Belleville would three juntor rinks. The Verona Enters Protest. BE, PF. Blliott secretary of the Frontenac senior hockey association, has received a formal protest enter- ed by Verona against the game play- ead with Sydenham on the Sydenham rink on Saturday night on the ground that Sydenham played a man who was not eligible according to a ruling of the executive made on Jan. 21st. The player was Art Lee. Sydenham won the game by a score of 11 to 2, but it was well known that Art Lee was not eligible. Belleville Wins Group. By defeating Cornwall by a score of 11 to 8 on Monday evening, Belle- ville won the eastern group of the Intermediate O.H.A, It had been thought that Cornwall might pull out a victory and give Queen's inter- mediates a chance of getting into 'the race, The Belleville team, which is ome of the finest outfits seen on Kingston ice in years, will certainly keep the Western teams hustling fo defeat them. : Policemen vs. Firemen, __ To-day it is hockey, hockey, hoek- Je. wherever. you go.. Some people tell about it and dream about it. Even the palicement and, firemen of Kingston are at it. For some time the members of the Kingston police force have been talking about their fine team. This got Chief Arm- strong's firefighters going, aud now they have organized a team and are ready to. take on Chief Robinson's "Pets" any time for fun, money or nrarbles. with Rockwood Will play Brockville. The Rockwood curlers, who havo been very active for the past few have been admitted to the sen- series of the Central Ontario Curl- BE league. The first games will be ved on Wednesday morning at 8 Rockwood rink when Brockvilio 1 Rockwood curlere will meet. In afternoon It is expect on ounlers will play 'on 'Satur Will Leave on Saturday. The Queen's senior hockey teem . will meet MeGiMl in Montreal six feet square, |1y caused by a spark from the stove [to hold on to. against each other the comtest will be worth going miles to see. Young Irishmen Champions, The A. O. H. team has resigned from the senfor series of the city lea- gue, and as a result the Young Irish- men are winners of group 3 on points. These two teams were '0 olay on Wednesday for the group chan- plonship, but the former team has become broken up, forcing 'heir management to retire from the series, EIGHTEEN INCHES OF SNOW. In the Woods--Roads Are : Drawing Wood, Vennacher, Jan. 28.--Farmers re- port the roads in good condition for drawing wood and marsh hay. There is about 18 inches of snow in the oods. Stanley Gregg has a job cut- ting and drawing pulp wood. cuts it in G. W. Jackson's swamp and deMvers it on Lackie creek. @. M. Bebee made a business trip to Lavant Station this week. Miss Em- ma Gregg accompanied her sister, Mrs, Ezra Lloyd, to Kingston to spend the winter months, Mr. and Mrs. William Beverly, Matawachan, are visiting at Solomon Bebee's. Mr. and Mrs. Wiliam Bailey, Mountain Grove, are visiting the latter's par- ents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bebee, this week. Miss Mary Topper, Elgin Mills, has been engaged to teach the school here. D. J. Flake, Lavant Station, was through here yesterday looking after his telephone line and putting In some new batteries, Wellington Holmes has been kid up with a very severe attack of eppendicitis, Good For A blaze in the roof of Wellingtgn | discovers that some unscrupulous | Holmes' house burned a hole about The blaze was like- pipe. Par iam Personals, Parham, san 28.-- The ' basebaii club held +, box social and dance on Friday evi ning. was in att ndance, Bernice Hwes are home enham Hkh School for the weok- end. Mr. and Mrs. J. A, Goodiel- low are at W. L. Goodfellow's., A number from here attended the fun- eral of the late Mrs, W. Shellington at Cole Lake. T. A. Wagar and fam- ily at A. C.'Wagar's; Mrs. G. A. Smith at J. N. Smith's; Miss Carrie Barr at Harrowsmith, Philip Wa- gar, Wagarville, Ivan Wagar and Geo. Reynolds at T. RE. Wagar's. Earl and Myrtle Cornwall, Wagar- ville, at B. Cornwall's. Mrs. B. Han- nah and children at 8. Barr's, Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Barr in the cit§ for the week-end, Misses Clara and tm -- Joseph W. Cook died at the age of 101 years THE FUTURE Wales returns from India, nderstood fond Park shown above, The firemen were out 'to practice He | Barrie at|and edy will have their fnnings at the | Grand Opera House tonight where Rube Goldberg's sparkling musical | povelty, "Boob McNutt," will hold | forth. The screamingly funny musi- | cal comedy is based on the popular | cartoons of the same name which has | attracted universal attention This | particular musical play, which is in [ two acts, with original and interpo!- jated songs, dances and music, is said |to be playing to packed house | everywhere, The management prone | tos a most gorgeous and extravag#nt | | scenntc production and stunning coa- | tumes which are said to be the | smartest and latest French creatio | The character of "Boob McNutt | itself 'as sufficient guarantee that all | that ensues, proceeds and develops, | will be excruciatingly funny. "Boob" gets into all sorts of scrapes, much | to the delight and merriment of the jaudience. A smart cast will be seen | in #he leading roles, supplemented by | a chorus of winsome young girls.- - Advt. Rex Stock Co. The bill at"the Grand for the last 3 days of this week promises to be one of the best comedies that the Rex Stock Company has yet produc- ed. It is the laughable and yet in- |teresting story of an {for whom this play js named. ["Bob"" the drummer in question finds himself stranded at Grand Junction, | (yes the town looks just as it sounds) and meets the charming little sta- tion agent, played by Miss Vaughn. Of course they fall in love at first sight. During the second act Bob | men are trying to do Beth out of her |land that she has fought all her life { In his endeavor to save her from these men he himself gots in wrong with the girl in ques- tion, and it takes the rest of this de- | lighttul play to straighten things out. Everyone of the company ap- Bathurst orchestra (Pear in this play to even the Park { {| Kiddies, who appear as the funny station. The scenery is well worthy of mention, in the first act, the sta- tion in the One Horse Town is a work Of art. The other three ects |are well mounted, . the way they should be, All lovers. of the grand {old game of poker wil enjoy the five-handed game in the second act. ~--Advt, At the Alien, "The Man From Lost River," a {Goldwyn picture, the fedture attrac- dion at the Allen Theatre today, and on Wednesday, is a stirring tale of emotional conflict that justifies the 800d old virtues of fidelity and truth condemns the weakness of char- acter that seeks only pleasure and ordinary | "Drummer" or Travelling Salesman | y from syd- | Mttle country kids that get into ev- | |erything they shouldn't around the | glib love-maker wins the girl but | {Soon proves his utter unworthiness. | The girl is admirably played by Frit- |21 Brunette. How the situation fin- | { ally becoming unbearable to the girl, | is resolved, furnishes one the | most thrilling climaxes seen on the | screen in a long time. '"'The Man | From Lost River" is a Frank Lloyd ! production. ----Advt, aan | } of i Latofirs. Mary Taylor. Mrs. Mary Taylor, wife of John { Taylor, died at the Hotel Dieu on | { Tuesday at the age of seventy-eight | years. Deceased was born*in the | county of Armagh, Ireland, and | came to this country with her hug-| band in 1869, She is survived by| mounts, in 1921, her husband and six children, two sons and four daughters: John Tay- | lor, Buffalo; Samuel Taylor, Mil-| | waukee, Wis.; Mrs. Smith, Milwau- | kee, Wis.; Mrs. Lee, North Bay, {Ont.; Mrs. McDonald, Spanish Mills, | {Ont., and Mrs. Short, Kingston. | -------- et | | | | y at | | Who led the jocke and who al successes. races in days. a race horse. The youth was oy <A Lang is only 17 years old. ay EXPOSITORY PREACHING! to a | for Hie Royal Highness, - -- PRINCE OF WALES. the Daily News says he will require that Viseount Farquhar proposes to vacate White Lodge, Good Annual Report. | At the annual directors meeting ot | {the Bay of Quinte Fire Insurance | | Company, George M. McCartney was | * | re-elected president for 19082. No | Presbyterian Witness {change was made in the board of di-| In summoning thie church | rectors, in fact the same slate was re- | Ministry of Biblical exposition, Dr | tured as had held office in 1921: [w. G. Jordan has performed a signal | President, Geo. M, McCartney. [service for the cause of true relig- Vice president, E. T, Plews. {lon. In the preface of his little | Secretary treasurer, M. R. German, | Pook Sg | Agent, R, H, Calnan. fot which a notice appears else- | Directors, Charles Lauder, Frank | where in this issue, Professor Jordan | Baton, Adolphus Roblin, W. A. Fos-|[says: "The following pages are (ter, E. B. Purtelle, M..¥. Hawkins (written by one who during several |and Hamilton Welbanks. years of regular pastoral servile | Auditors, Harold Huff, Walter learned that, both for preacher and { Sfriker. 3 people, it is important that careful {The financial statement showed | exposition of the Sacred Scriptures neiderable gain for the past year | should form a considerable partion spite of losses which totalled $5.- {of the weekly deliverances from the |788.50. The company now carries | pulpit. Since that time the writer | tatal risks of $3,099,635, a gain Of hag spent many years in the study [$180,250 during 1921. Total assets land teaching of the Old Testament are $48,651.03, an increase of $2,- ang this experience has only confirm- 927.71 over 1920. ed the earlier conviétioh." And fur- : ther, "In these days when the whole Rev. Dr. R. W. Dickie, chairman jgaurch service is only about the {ot the Montreal Protestant school {length of the Sermons that ware de- board, said today that he had heard {vered to previous generations, it is of no more equitable or more prac- |®eldom possible to attempt comment tical plan of distribution of school [Pon and exposition of the Scripture tax monies than thet now in vogue |1®8sons, so there is all the more need in Montrenl that the expository sermon' or lec- A questionaire will be gent by [ture should not lose its place." the Ontario Medicil assoclation "to |. In his plea for expository preach- the doctors of the province asking if | Ing Dr. Jordan is just going back to they. are in favor of the Mmit of 'Ii- the apostolic method, and back of quor'a physician can prestribe being | that to the example of Chrig Him- reduced. self. Jesus' fir:t recorded discourse Was an exposition of a passage in the Prophets. He commended the searching of the Scriptures, and out of Moses and the Prophets he ex- pounded in all the Seriptures - the things concerning Himself. The dis- Courses of Peter, of Paul, of the evangelists, Stephen and Philip, were expositions of the Striptures. The Bereans were commended tor their willingness to search the Scriptures and to test the new teaching by this divine standard. One obvious and great advantage of expository preaching is its anthor- itativeness. It carries with it the Convictiow 6f & "Thus saith the Lord." Sermons may be eloquent and earnest, but if they express only the views of the preacher they do not 'bear the authority of'a divine message. Today, as in the early. days of Christianity, and In the times of the Prophets, the effect of the message is in p to the con- viction that it has back of ft divine authority. The advantage to the preacher himself, Dr. Jordan points out, is In 'the variety of matter which it sup- plies. "Only gradually does the rich Suggestiveness of this style become @pparent when subjects that seem LE JOCKEY CHARLES LANG, ys of North At Jefferson Park, New Two years ago Lang never had a thur, the well-known turfman, whose like "The Challenge of the Book™ | * » eo OF HAMILTON, ONT. America in winning ar has scored many he won / 29 mount on "discovered" by James McAr- ness is inset above, | | ready this ye Orleans, at first to be uninviting and barren, yield up their hidden treasures. For | a-nran who speaks often to the same | audience, variety is desirable and may be sought in many ways, sober or sensational. One of the most sat« | isfactory of these ways is keeping | elose to the passage or subject, re« | cognizing that each story, prophecy | oF poem has an individuality; while the same lesson may be taught by | more than one passage in each case; [1t will have its own peculiar pete | ting." | { One only has to think of the new | interest and light which a passage jor book of the Bible yields in the { hands of a great expositor like | George Adam Smith to realize the | Possibilities of this kind of preaches | ing. To many the prophecies. of las {alah have become a new book, throbs | bing with life and modern interest, | when placed in their true historical | setling by this prince of expositors, | Bpace will not permit even a refs | erence to many of the illuminating {and helpful suggestions of Professor | Jordan's little book, but we cannot [close without an illustration of what |the author means by the right sorg | of expository preaching: "Psalm Ixxiii, a complets poems with a aefinite course of thought running through it, ellidg how & man almost lost his faith as he look= {ed out upon the world and saw the prosperity and popularity of the wicked, how he was arsested by the fact that his experience, if turned Into a doctrine, would work ntischief Among men of simple faith, and fine ally how he saw his own stupidity and realized that no mere external Success can be the reward of the gocd man, To tell such stories over again with sincerity and i? t osay 10 our fiearers, here is thought of a reverend thinker, th wavering yet victorious faith of noble soul--is there not in that & real ministry which, apart apology or controversy, will appeal to those who face similar cond : and carry similar burdens? the intelligent interpretation of clent thought may exercise a ministry in our own day." . It was Miss Carrie Robinson, lie stenographer, Hamilton, wi typed the original "beauty powder" circular for the late James Buchanag from his pencil notes. ,, 'The 'Ontario government ans nounces it will also reimburse munj« clpalities to the extent of one-third of the expenditure for the relief of single men who are out of employ ment. : Canadian government suggests nae tional organization for Russian res Met. y

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