Daily British Whig (1850), 25 Mar 1922, p. 6

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er L [ \ SATURDAY, MARCH 25, 1022, THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG. : pa oe ei i THE BRITISH WHIG| sooial Homanien, = "[iseby, that churches and peliglon- BIBLE THOUGHT FOR TO-DAY : SOTH YEAR. | - Thoiphris is used to describe the |shouid be dispensed With, were. put En . | constructive attitude adopted by .soc- | into effect, the whole of civilization GOD FORGIY ms AND | fal refolmers to the present day prob- [woula totter. In this case, the com- HEALS: Bless t e Lond, [lems, It is "the antithesis of that | mon girl showed more wisdom than {O my soul, and forget not & 164 2] consclenceless individualism of the [the highly educated man whose | Péefts: who forgiveth all thine oi | S-- dts- | a heist {1quities; who healeth all thy | past century that had adopted the {learning hed made him an atheist. {eases; who redeeméth thy life from | destruction.--Psalm 103: 2-4, i | slogan of non-interference with any [It is a strange, yet an indisputable | individual in business, no matter | fact, that the almost unanimous ma- | what that business was or haw it was jority of atheists are men of much | BIBBY'S |'being conducted. It differentiates {t- | education. | » : | sels E that consclentious individ- | men can be found who would tear ALONG LIFES DETOUR SUITS OVERCOATS d HATS ualiem which in a general way wishes | religion and C Sukledaa ty so Sireads BY SAN HILL \ y dail n le well but says the ills of | by the application of higher or e-1 \ : fo ure 10 sor AT NEW AND PLEASING PRICES life are no concern of the individual. | ism. That is purely the work of the 4 : tarts with the [highly educated college man, yet by . . Social humanism' starts e Doing business has become our hobby. We are real enthusiasts, . Won't Need Science's Aid. dictum that not only may fn yiduals hig application of his learning he | on onl te but at We buy direct from makers. { We learn that kisses have a "kick need regeneration, Society | undermines the faith of others uae That can be measured by science's We buy for cash. We sell for cash. We make small profits, but we make them 4 ilg th 1 standards of those art, itself may be regenerated that | ivortts & e Ho bei swing But' if you want s Kick Just try often. A glance over these few items will tell the story. . ' 1 37 d i corporate salvation is a Cessary To kiss another man's sweetheart. corrollary of individual SE ton. In some. professions, of course, uni- for "no man liveth to himself." Jt | versity education is essential, but it Observations of Oldest Inhabitant, measures life not by material but by |i a fact that to-day these profes- 1 kin remember when s Batener bumen values, It says that a man |Sions are so overcrowded that the | S550 to catch $16 Dau ah tried | | but he would get bounce sud ts"Detter than a sheep not because he | universities are seeking some method TAL Sow, Would fetch more in the market but [to curtail the 'mumber of students. because he is man; and it harks |The rush to secure higher education back to the oid prophet's slogan that | is sacrificing quality for quantity, is 202|e man fs more precious even than | sacrificing: religion for higher criti- "Whatever the landlord wants fine gold. The sockal humanist seeks | clsm, and is helpiag to turn out too [make it. ny son" grimly replied pa, | to join with all who would make | many educated pagans. who Las just been notified of another .. 85:00| human socloty beautiful, end who | The uselessiiess of some branches | increase in fat rates. | * 3500] Would enrich lite with every gift and | Of higher education is also becoming | Sonu, Cyele. * grace of which human Mfe is capable. | apparent. Take, for indtance, a uni- The éay. Year if not patd in' advance $1.30 Just because there is for the social | versity course in arts. Taken in con- The say. One year, to United States 27.20 | bumanist this revaluation of lite not | Junotion with another coyrse, say, The pay. OUT-OF-TOWN REPRESENTATIVES: in terms of cash but of character he | in theology or medietne, it is a valu. E en en Jone ny trea) seeks to change the intense competi- i able asset, But, taken by itself, it v0 Toronto, tion of the market place for gain, | Is of very dittle value to the student which 100ks tod much Mke the com. {as 8 Wwageearning proposition. It petition of the feed trotigh, into com- | Eves a certain amount of culture, 0d petition in sport, in art, tn human | ook knowledge, but, unless the stu- excellence, in character, dent be bent on a literary career, Journal) | It lays new emphasis on the need | these can hardly be considered as COMBINATION Se hate, ged mony or ny sducation as a | Yejunbie dsots. Many studonts who rocker, baby cab 1: ump at means of developing men into good back froni the war found this Most every kind of combination ex- | and Into better men. The new day, |'9Ut in an interesting way. On being cept the kind the ladies' wear, {says your soctal reformer, will more | amined by ths D. 8. C. R, with a | cheerfully pay for education than it | View to ascortaining whether or not [now does for roads and bridges, | they were in need of vocational train- necessary as these things may be, | Ing, they were surprised to learn that The new day will study more zeal- [@n arts student at a university was ously all the yesterdays that preced- | classed as a laborer. The apts course | ed it in order to conserve and appro- | had no practical value, and it was | priate and re-value every asset that a | merely an ald to social culture, common humanity has acquired in The force of Principal Hutton's the past. It will have a new rever- | Words can best be illustrated by a re- ence for the value of tradition not | ference to the strong, rugged Christ- that it may slavishly rest on it but |ian character of the Scottish Coven- 2 Jiupicd Bouse » that it may Become a stepping stone (anters and their descendants, who He: "I might, but it would scare me to a more progressive to-morrow. without book education, but with a | worse to go to the office and not find The aim of this new humanism |Ereat honesty of purpose and love | the ghost walking there." will be a united effort t for better | Of their God in their hearts, sacrific- | : ------ houses, but for Botts om : et their all for their belief in the We SHI Prefer Having ure shined on Will eck cooperatively to produce |tTuth, and left a heritage of TED! sign on Ving strow. discovered by a human society that will have a soc- | ®ousness behind them which has | B. D. of Newport: lal consciousness and a social con.|made its mark all over the world. | LADIES AND GENTS' SHOES science, : No higher education had spoiled SHINED WIDE them, no thought of higher criticism instilled doubt into their minds, J They lved their simple, honest lives according to the dictates of a God- fearing comscience, and who shall say that they did mot make a greater contribution to the wélfare of man- kind than -all the modern disciples of higher education and higher criti- cism, who, steeped in knowledge gleaned from the books of man, seek to destroy the power of the Word of God? ed Daily and Semi-Weekly by BRITISH WHIG PUBLISHING Co,, LIMITED President «. Editor and Managing-Director TELEPHONES: ---- An Alarming One, "Pa, what is a flat rate? ence. Usually. ' asked Clar- es BY bovine nln ens 229 ORIC® ov. vs ri nntvnnnnn,s 2 {© + SUBSCRIPTION RATES: (Dally Edition) One year, delivered in city year, if paid In advance year, b, to YOUNG MEN'S OVER- COATS New Slip-on models and Ches- terfields; new designs; new models. Regular $20.00 and $22.50 values. Our Price .......... $16.50 ENGLISH GABERDINE TOP COATS The $25.00 variety. Price .....,.... $20.00 The $32.50 variety Our Price .......... $25.00 Many have tried to meet our prices Many have tried to beat our prices YOUNG MEN'S SUITS Hand-tailored garments: new- est models; neat designs. The regular $30, $32.50 and. $35 values, Our Price .......... $25.00 MEN'S TWEED SUITS: Good, honest Domestic Tweed 'Suits; neat patterns; sizes 36 to 46. The $25.00 variety, Price .......... . $20.00 ~ FINE QUALITY HATS 1922 styles. $6 and $7 vari Our Price ae The $4.50 and $5.00 variety Our Price ........... $3.00 ~--New York Herald, Much think. On blink. No "chink™ ' sre published Actual name of the A Nifty Little Combination, Eh! « Jon C ifled Ad. In Sandusky Star- i8 due of the beat job (Classifie n Sa offices in Canada, The circulation of THE BRITISH WHIG is authenticated by the ABO ; Awndit Bureau of Circnlations How It Started. He'd remember her age and forget her birthdays. BP rr oo In the spring the average man's fancy lightly turns to thoughts of Only Few Lumps Left, Now. foating, We hail with joy Old spring's return, For soon we'll have No coal to burn. 'There seems to. be a close affinity Between a peal of laughter and a banana peel, § a------------------ Adam had one advantage. The first robin didn't fool him into tak- dag 'em off, ------------ The happy medium in industrial @djustment 1s one that can make the ghost walk, een The still'small voice seldom gets a hearing if there's a profit clamoring to be taken. ' Here, Too. She: "Would you be afraid to go to watch for a VULCANIZING TIRE REPAIRS It is cheaper to have than poor repairs. Make old 'hats look like new, 30c. bottle All the popular dyes. for Spring dyeing. Dr. Chown's Drug Store 185 Princess Street. Phone 348 We're in No Hurry to Ask Any Such Favor From Him. Dear Sam: BE. M. Balmer, of Colorado Springs, is willing to do the last thing in the world for you. Your right, he's an undertaker. --Eureka Springs (Ark.) Reader. This looks very much like an at- tempt to bring in the kingdom of God on earth. It is no less than that, for the kingdom as Jesus conceived it means human life, all human life dominated through and through by love; and the manifesto which Christ issued at the beginning of His min- Istry was that '"the spirit of the Lord is upon me for he has consecrated me to preach the Gospel to the poor. He has sent me to proclaim release for captives and recovery of sight for the of one a minute, but they are (blind, to set free the oppressed, to in gross lots, proclaim the Lord's year of favour." Sl -------------------- Or to put it as Tolstoy does in his | Getting rich quick would be rather | illuminating way: "plea; if penitentiary life wasn't "It all lies in the fact that men : darned confining, think there are circumstances when -------------- one may deal with human beings "Bootleggers demand an eye for ] without love; and there are no such MB oye," --heading. Beme of thom de- circumstances. One may deal with mand an eye for a drink, things without love; one may cut down trees, make bricks, hammer ¥ At that, taxation without repre- entation wasn't 'much worse Lots of men think they hear the . all of duty when they only hear money taliing, ' Romance: "He married the rich @irl and the gossips lived happily over afterward." ------------------ One reason why birds are plenti- is because there are no stunt fly- among them, Ff m---------- { The suckers may be born at the good repairs Our Vulcanizing Department is manned by experts and our repair - work is absolutely guaranteed. Can You Beat Itt A stingy man Is Walter Hay; He always walts For me to pay. ' Prices are reduced considerable. 3053%5 Non-Skid $1250 (Guaranteed) A tightwad is Old Rufus Peck; He always lets Me pay the check. --Hastingg (Neb.) Tribune. gy Our Canadian Question And Answer Corner / A skinfint is Ola Albert Stoneg He lots me pay, Then asks a loan. --Canton (Ohio) News THOMAS COPLEY ) Telephone 987. 2 Wanting dything done in the . 4 tery line. | MOOR 'S . bh eeee rn sath, "Hg i : - . AA nn-- 206-8 WELLINGTON STREET A. --Kakabeka Falls, on the River Kamistiquia provides light and power for Fort William, Q--What was Canada's mineral production in 1921 ¢ A--CQCanada's mineral production in 1921 reached a grand total of $172,827,580, viz.: Metallic, $52,- 580,002; non-metallic, $89,405,256; structural materials and clay pro- ducts, $30,342,323. Q--What is Canada's present rail- 'Way mileage ? -- Tremendous Advance in Tea Prices. The tea market has advanced since last May fully 15 or 16e. a pound in London, Colombo and Calcutta, ------------------ Kingston Kiwanis Club, An important meeting of the King- ston Kiwanis Club is to be held at the YMCA. on Monday evening, at 6 o'clock, when the speaker will be Dean Clark, Chicago, who is secre- tary of the fi Kiwanis convention, to be held th Toronto in June. - During the evening a presen- tation will be made to the Y.M.C.A. for the new roof on the gymnasium. Dr. Austin will bave an important announcement to make from the com- mittee on underprivileged boys and another interesting feature will b3 a presentation to George Brownlee, the retiring secretary of the club, who is leaving for Toronto, After Watson, Whaddya Make of This? (McCreary County ( .) Record) George Walker and zel Dice 18'a to Parkers Lake on Sunday to dine with J. D-Erskine and family, and then 15'd back to town that afternoon. iron, without love; but ome canmot deal with men without it: just as one/ cannot deal with bees without being careful. If you deal carelessly with bees, you will injure them, and will yourself be injured, And so with men." His Long Suit, BMnks. "Why would 4 wmcientist Waste time hunting for ghosts? Jinks: "That's What I'd like to | know. They should have given the [Job to a ary agent; he's the fellow to locate spirits." Let's see, how is it they explained ms depression before the word ical" was invented ? Work aftigently and be honorable, 'when you are dead the world will 'How much did he leave 7" Brick dwelling--4 bed rooms --Alfred Street--$3,500. Frame dwelling, Albert St. (south side of Princess Street) 6 bedrooms, electric light, gas, furnace, verandah--§3,500, Brick, Livingston Avenue, ¢ bed rooms--$3,600, Several houses to rent, Money to loan. : IS HIGHER EDUCATION WORTH WHILE? Principal Maurice Hutton, of Uni- versity College, Toronto, has recent- ly acquired a reputation for saying amazing things in regard to educa- tion and literature, and he sustained this reputation in his address to the Toronto Canadian Club the other day. His subject had the intriguing title of "The Wisdom of the Vulgar," and in his speech he said some thingy which rather shocked the prominent Torontonians who heard him, "Sometimes," he remarked at ome stage in his address, "I 'wonder if there is half as much need for uni. versities and schools as there is popu- larly supposed-to be, and whether we 'would not be much better off without some of our so-called higher educa- ---- Daily Sentence Sermon, Give a man a raw deal and you'nl find him cooking up something for a ---------------------- - "Diners take the place of striking " you later, "headline. It's nothing Diners are inured to waiting. News of the Names Club, F. I, of Dry Ridge, Ky. notifies that any time we get mixed In our dates we can call on Alson Calendar, of that place. J. W. thinks p* are in the marble natl, should be fn ness, A. Kettle of Knoxville, Tenn. bt. ter watch out the dry agents have comparatively fow, But there § 00 dress sults for rent at that ' : Pe & Biewers who business in Cincin- trivial world problems seem the plumbing busi- 'We reflect that soon we shall Br tho crack of the bat against a BUCKEYE INCUBATOR BUNT'S HARDWARE pure t; the language has no phrases to cope with this event! Oh, willow, willow, waly!/And likewise lackaday! And once I blithered gay- Ve can't eliminate discontent un- 'We eliminate the cause, Ard the as a rule, is the other fellow's 1] ty. > . i T. Beck Robertson, of Kingston, will learn with deep re- " * «. A ---------------- v cops add prohibition spot- are the only officers who have laws in order to discourage "Jtion." - . His audience gasped, but Principal + Hutton supplemented his remarks by the further statement that the wis- dom of ths ages Is often possessed by the common man on the streets, by the umeducated Deople, by the masses. s While this was perhaps a bold statement for the head of a great Gollege to make, it was, as he went on to show, one which was to a large extent justified. It brings up the great contentious question ' of the direction In which the educated classes of to-day are being led by higher education, It opens up a great fleld of controversy as to the functions of higher education and its effect upon ho pivilosopiry - of pre- One lin n used by Principal Hutton brought out his point admir- ably. He cited the case of an ordin- ary girl, with no book education, who the eR you stall In the midst-of trat- Sfpwever, there is no particular Bin telling your engine trou- id a policeman, ------------ yet the man who thinks ef- establish peace are futile will yedr after year to make on his lawn, -- how, the boast that man h: jered the air reminds ts of the You will discover that she takes A knew by tnstinot that i Voltafre's | ¥ the dinner, the members of the club will go in a body to Memorial Hall, to hear Muriel Kerr, the wonderful girl pianist, who hes scored such a tremendous success throughout Can- ada and the United States: A big turnout of the club members is look- wd for, : ad % . EASY PHILOSOPHY Philosophy is easy, stacking high, breezy remar i f i £ E § i g gk g § E £ : : § x i when one is Hh ly, ere hard luck came my way Jim Whitaker came snooping around my blasted home, to see if I. was whooping an optimistic pome. "I see", he said, "you're cheesey as any oher guy; philosophy is easy until hard luck comes by." ~--WALT MASON. -- £ 2 Bret of an accident that befell her this week. By a fall she suffered a fracture of her hip, : If you want something old. some- thing new, something lost, or even something blue advertise in OUR classified columns. . The sense of smell in birds is not 28 strong as in quadrupeds. OAL QUARTET TE { . . VERYBODY'S got to be on 'the defensive in the wintertime. When winter attacks you throw on another shovelfhl of coal and stand pat. You'll come through the co'd months Bappily if you keep the Sire going. Crawford Scranton Coal Phoue 9. Foot of Queen 91.

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