Daily British Whig (1850), 2 Sep 1922, p. 19

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SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1922. THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG. - pe --e gt Sunday Services in Churches George | er. Seats free. Strangers and visitors , | cordially invited to attend. | Calvary Congregational Church.-- St. Paul's,--Holy Communion, 11 corner Charles and Bagot streets. a.m. Preacher, Canon FitzGerald, | Pastor, Rev. A. F. Brown, 144 Bar- M.A. Evening prayer, 7 o'clock. rie street. Phone 1306w. Sunday, 11 Preacher, Canon FitzGerald, M.A. a.m., subject, "The Great Interview." -- !3 p.m., Sunday school; 7 p.m., sub- St. Andrew's.--Rev, John W. ject, "Opportunity to Return." Mon- Stephen; minister. Services, 11 a.n day, 8 p.m., Christian Endeavor; and 7 p.m. Conducted by the minis- Wednesday, 8 p.m., prayer meeting. ter. Sunday school, 3 p.m. Strang-| ers cordialy welcome. | Princess Street Methodist Church -- ~--Rev. John A. Waddeli, minister. Cooke's Presbyterian Church, [Services, 11 a.m. and 7 pm. The Brock street.--The minister, Rev. |mindster at both services. The sacra- W. Taylor Dale, will preach at 1] ment of the Lords Supper will be ad- a.m, and 7 p.m. Baptism at morning | ministered at the close of the morn- service. |ing service. Sunday school, 2.45 {| p.m, Strangers and yisitors cordially Union street church, Cowie, B.A., student pastor, 83 p.m Bible school. 7 p.m., public worship. | Chalmers Church----Rev, R. J. Wil- son, D.D., minister. Services at 11 am. and 7 pm. The minister will preach at Doth eervices. You are invited, Portsmouth Union Church.--Min- ister, E. A. Kneotel, B. A. Sabbath school, 11 a.m. Reopening service, 7 p.m. Rev. F. Hassold, of Central, N.Y., will preach. Special music by the choir. Strangers welcome. Bethel Church, corner Barrie and Johnson streets--Pastor, A. Sidney Duncan. Services 11 am. and 7 p.m Communion service, 11 a.m.; Sunday school, 3 pm. Evening subjeoc:, "Tree of Life." Wednesday, 8 p.m, "Missionary." All are cordially in- vited. First Baptist Church, Sydenham aud Johnson streeis--Rev. J. 8. La- Flair, pastor. Labor Sunday services, 11 a.m., sermon theme, "The Toiler's Task." 2.456 p.m., Bible school. 7 p.m., sermon theme, "The Toiler's Reward." Bervices conducted by the pastor. St. James' Church, corner Union and Barrie street.--T. W. Savary, rector, the rectory, 152 Barrie street. 11 a.m,, holy communion and sermon. Sermon subject, "Epn- phatha." 3 p.m., Sunday school; 7 p.m., evening prayer and sermon. Sermon subject, "Love as Brethren." St. Luke's Church, Nelson street, --Rev. J. de P. Wright, M.A, B.D., rector. Twelfth Sunday after Trinl- ty. 11 a.m., morning prayer and holy communion. 2.30 p.m., Sunday school and bible classes; 4.30 p.m. holy baptism; 7 p.m., evening pray- welcomed to all services. Queen Street Methodist Church, corner of Queen and Clergy streets--- Rev. Walter 8. Lenmon, B.A, D.D., | minister. 11 a.m., 'Christ's Faulty {Workmen." 7 p.m., "Nehemiah Tells | How the Work was Done." Preacher at both services, the pastor. Sunday school and Bible classes at 3 p.m. This church welcomes strangers. Sydenham Street Methodist Church ---The minister, R. H. Bell, will preach 11 am. Labor Day message. Bolo, Miss A. Pollard. 7 p.m., "Sin of Sloth." Solo, Miss Olive Wood- |man. Violin solos by Dr. Arthur Lock at both services. Full Bible school at 2.45 pom. W. W. Chown"s class at 9.45 a.m. Reception communion Sunday, Sept. 10th. St. George's Cathedral--Very Rev. G. Lothrop Starr, M.A, D.D., dean and rector. Rev. W. E. Kidd, M.A., M.C., curate, 7 Wellington street. Phone 869w. Twelfth Sunday after Trinity. 8 a.m., holy communion; 11 am., holy communion. Preacher, Rev. W.E. Kidd. 3 p.m., Sunday school; 4 p.m. holy baptism; 7 p.m., evensong. Preacher, Rev. W. E. Kidd. First Church of Christ Scientist Johnson street between Bagot and Wellington._Sunday services, 11 am. and 7 p.m, Subject, "Man." Sunday school, 9.45 a.m., Wednesday 8 p.m., testimonial meeting. Public reading room open every afternoon except Sunday and holidays from 3 to § p.m., and on Thursday evening from 7.30 £9 9.30 p.m. All are cordially invited to the services and to the reading room By the Rev. HOW LIFE IS LENGTHENED Charles Stelzle. "The practical effect of the mir- acles of Jesus whereby he raised men from the dead are being repeated to-day--not in exceptional cases as was true of the miracles of Jesus but in the length of the average man's dite. Scientists are telling us that buman 'life may be extended fifteen years in a single generation by ap- plying the science of preventing dis- ease and accidents, And everywhere municipalities 'and groups of various kinds are seeking through the promotion of safety and health to bring this about. But science alone will never ac: complish this "miracle" because the extension of human life will resolve into the question of developing char- acter and will power. The preven- tion of sickness and death involves the ability to fight harmful appe- tites and evil practices. Science must be supplemented by moral and spiritual culture. Death rates the world over are be- jing rapidly lowered. In Europe as campaigns, METHODIST CHURCH ODESSA and WILTON CIRCUIT SOFORD F. DI The following Wilton Circuit for tober and November, WILTON. Morning Service at 10.30 on the 1st, 3rd and Sth Sundays of the month; Bvening Service at 7.30 or 7 as may be announced, on the 3nd and 4th Sundays. A Vesper Service on the 3rd Sunday after- noon with Special Music. YOU ARE INVITED! BRING A FRIEND! Please cut this out for reference. | is the plan of services for the new Odessa and April, May, June, July, August, September, Oc- tn A db dn i EN ------_---------- XON, PASTOR. SA. t ndays. Service on the 4th Sunday in the Afternoon with Special Music. The one to Why It Saves Coal-- all the big features of the famous Hecla Furnace. i | is invention the radiating 5g 4 That means more heat--less fuel. = At least (2) It has the big CIRCULAR Waterpan that keeps the air > TS re whe Hecla Pipeless Furnace has t has the STEEL-RIBBED Firepot. the Hecla three times lace of the ordi furnace. mn saved out of seven. and | a whole the average length of life] |doubled in. threé end ome half cen- {turies. In the United States the an- {nual death rate has decreased in {thirty years from 20 per thousand {to about 10 per thousand. The av- erage duration of life to-day is about 56 years as compared with 40 years {In 1855 and 35 years in 1789. In some sections of the country the length of life is even greater. In Kansas, for example, it may be |expected that a baby born in that state will live to be about 60 years old. The expectation of life {n the larger cities is 53 years. According to the Department of {How a Prompt TWO SERVANTS in | A HOME DISAPPEAR, Harry Dano, Chauffeur, anc| Mrs. Wilson, Waitress, Miss- ing From Near Clayton. Clayton, N.Y., Sept. 1.--Mystery surrounding the sudden disappear- | auce of. Harry Dano, an employee of Churies T. Terry, New York patent| atlorney, for the past seven years. | Dano seft Wednesday night, his boat belug found at Clayton. The Terry! fummer home is on Woronoco Is- land. ! MODERN SYSTEM OF TAILORING 10 CUSTOM MEASURE Four-Day Delivery Schedule Helped Build Business. Health of New York City, the death rate in that city has decreased from | about 20 per thousand in 1901 to approximately 13 per thousand In 1920. The death rate of babies un- der one year of age has decreased from 173 per thousand in 1901 to 85 per thousand in 1920. To indicate even more strikingly the enormous saving of life, it is pointed out that in 1901 when the population of New York was 3,544, 079 the death rate was 70,720, whereas In 1920 when the popula- ticn was 5,665,157 the total death rate had Increased to only 73,249. {It was also significant that largely en account of the activities of edu- catiunal and social agencies the death rate of babies in some tene- ment districts is no greater than it Is among those living in the better sections of the city. According to the statistical de- partment of one of the big life in-} surauce companies of this country, ! the ear 1921 registered the lowest | deaih rate ever recorded in United States and Canada. This company Mrs. Fred Wilson, whose husband | is said to have originally come from | Watertown, is also missing, she hav- | ing been employed as a waitress in| the Terry home. She left her hus- | baud and came here a few weeks ago | to work at the Terry home. { Mre. David Ross, daughter of Me. | Terry, in discussing the disappear-| ance, declared that Dano's services) CUSTOM SUITS, $25 TO $50 Tailored by Specialists, and a Per- fect Fit and Good Wear Are Guaranteed. The tailor who would guarantee Exclusive A plate of % powerful heat ¢CLARY'S Protected Element in your Electric Range is simply a plate of tough, fireproof, heat- conducting porcelain in which the coils that he would finish every suit with- in four days after he took the cus- tomer's measure would soon be much sought after. If the quality of his work were equal to his promptitude he would be inundated with orders. In the biggest and best wholesale tailoring house in Canada, the four- day schedule on all suits made to custom-measure has been carried out for eighteen years. In 1905, the total sales of Special Orders in the Semi-ready shops in Montreal amounted to $30,000, and it was a minor feature of their busi- ness. To-day in the same shops there is a well-organised department doing a business In custom tailoring alone of $500,000 a year. The growth of the Special Order Includes nearly fourteen million in-| Gasirial puileyholders or approxi-| ma.rly cne-eight of the total popu-| lacior of the two countries and prov] ably not less than one-quarter of that | in tbe cities. The mortality of tae | cent lower than the 1920 death rate which marked the minimum rerocd up to that time. It was 31.9 par cent lower than was the rate fur i911, Just what these figures mean in| actual saving of life is best shown! by the fact that, if the 1920 dea'h rate had prevailed in this particular group, 18,661 more persons would have died, and, if the 1911 dea bh rate had prevailed, 54,942 more deaths would have occurred. 'the decline in the death rate 'm 1921 was accomplished largely iu the ieduction in death from tuber- "uot. 5, pneumonia and influenza. The tuberculosis death rate in 1921 was 115.1 per 100,000, which !s 16.5 per cent lower than that for i020 and 48.8 per cent. below rae rate for 1911. Thus, in a period oi eleven' years, mortality from tubse- culosis has been cut almost in nal? This 'in itself is an almost unparal- leled accomplishment in the histo; of public health. But more amaz- Ing (ill is the fact that the declie ia continuing at an increased rie from year to year. At no time In 1931 did influenza attain epidemic prevalence. In sah of (ke three preceding years Jt was one of the chief mortality factors In 192] {it resumed its former status 86 a winor cause of death. Pnda- monia, which always has a hig" death rate also registered a great re- duction. The death rate of thase lwo causes combined, in 1921, wa. less han one halt the figure for i%20 and was 43 per cent. lower than that for 1911 when conditions, with reference to influenza anil prev monis, were normal, There has been a drop virtually of one 'rird in the deafl rate duriag department is ascribed to the prompt four-day schedule, whereby suit or | overcoat orders received before noon | on Monday are cut, tailored and par-| celled ready for shipment on Thursday | evening. Even at holiday rush time! | workers. R fy¥ «RelA few delays, and then only/ insua:ed attained the low rate of 5.54 |/ here are . | medi | ved ired spe- edical man to arrive on the scene per thousand lives. This is 13.7 per| When the otders received required spe-| cial patterns to be made for them. | There are over 400 Semi-ready stores| and Special Order merchants in Can-| ada. In the larger stores, a full stock | of Semi-ready clothes, tailored to the! try-on stage, is carried for inspection. | The Special Order is always a useful] adjunct, for It gives the customer | | choice of a million-dollar stock in pat.) terns and styles should he not find just| what he fancies in the garments als ready tailored. | Each Special Order is given Indl-| vidual making from the web of cloth carried in the warshouse Within an| hour after the Photo-type measure-| ment form is received the order is properly on its way through the shops] and in the hands of cutters and spe-| cialized tailors. { A Special Order outfit has been de- | scribed as a "Complete Tailor Shop in a Box." 1t carries sample swatches cut | from a stock of fine woollens valued| at $750,000. For the Special Order vat- | terns include also the cloths from | which all the big Semi-ready stores or-| der their stock goods. { In Kingston, an order for a custom-| tailored sult ig delivered on the morn- | ing of the fifth day, whilst in London, | Galt or Kitchener the garment is only delivered about noon on the Afth day.| In Winnipeg, as well as in Halifax and Kingston, one just figures the time| taken by a letter order to reach Mont- | real, and the quick return by express | "We never have any trouble with] our Special Order talloring," said one man who has sold thousands of these custom-made garments, "and we néver look for any, for the Semi-ready Com- pany guarantee that each order shall be made up exactly as designated on a hoto-type form which is akin to the hysique-type system that has made Semi-ready talloring so much sought after." The Special Order department of fhe Semi-read Shope does ' not compete with the Xorg department of stock goods, but is rather a useful reinforce- ment: Some of the best taflors In Canada advocate and use the system for its uniformity of quality, its same price everywhera an its ever-satisfying the past eleven years, which acs tordirg to this company, is equiva- l«nt tc an extension of four years of life. It is rather significant that the Geath rate of working men betwaen 86 and 44 1s approximately 50 per seul. higher than it {is among male: of all classes throughout the coun wy. In general, however, the situation with reference to the length of life is extremely gratifying. It indicates that the peoplé as a whole are Lv. Ing more sanely and that the gener- al moral tendency is upward ra.ner than downward, as many pessimiste insist. 'the requirements of this day and geueration are such that men nee: to live longer in order to make the mest of life. So much time is re- quired in getting ready for one's lile work. To-day a man does not fin- Ish his technical education until he !s about twenty-five years old. Fr. ricily, men were graduated from coi- lege at sixteen largely because in these days the college curriculum. about equalled the curriculum in tae average high school of to-day. The increased vitality gives old men tud women better opportuaity fo: service, a ---------- EXPECTING A GOOD YIELD. Asa Result of the Very Fine i ery Harvest Rockfield, Aug. 30. -- H is completed In this section, sad while no threshing has as yet been Mrs. and weeks with her parents, Mr. R. A. Foley. Mrs. F. Warr son, Lloyd, Oak guests at W. t recently. Mr. and Mrs. Leslié Warren and son, Keith, visited friends In Broeckville on Sunday. Miss Hilda De Wolfe was a recent guarantee. "We stick to quality, to pure wool weaves and good weaves and leave the cheap materials severely alone. A ood Suit cannot be produced and sold or less than $35 to-day," said the President of the Company In a letter to his customers. George Van Horne says that the new patterns and fabrics are very fine, and | success of Master Joseph Purcell in at they have arrived in good time for the fall trade. "I enjoy Just show- ing them," he said. | arms OF FALL FAIRS. | gy Almonte ............ Arden ...i.... Araprior . Bancroft .... Belleville .. Bommanvills ... Centreville .. Cobden ... Cornwall .......... Delta . cess. Sept. 11.13 «+... Sept. 30. Fraakford ..Sept. 21-22 Frankville «ess. .Bept. 7-8 lnverary ................Sept. 12 Kemptville ............ Sept. 21-22 KINGSTON ..........SEPT. 19-22 Lanark ......... «eo... Sept. 7-8 Lansdowne ...........Sept. 14-15 Lombardy ...... +. .Sept. 10 London (Western Fair). . Sept. 9-15 Maberly ..............Sept. 26-27 Marmora .............Sept. 25-26 McDonald's Corners .......Sept. 29 was sax senssseaBOPty HoIE Central Canada) Sept. 3-18 Poll ore fre mes aga Toronto Aug. 26-Sept. § axses sens JAUE ' Canadian 3 as chauffeur had always been entire-\ ly raiisfactory, and that he had no| known reason for leaving so Sudden- | Is. This was his eigath summer in the Jerry family's employ. Mrs. Ross 1efused to say much concerning | the disappearance of the two and de- | clared that she could not say that | they went together. ! L'ano has a wife and two children | Iu Orange, N.J. are embedded close to the surface. McClary's Protected Element becomes a plate of powerful heat, as you desire, when the current is turned on. It is absolutely trouble-proof--nothing can in- jure the high-resistance coils--they deo their work speedily and efficiently. Don't buy an Electric Range withou$ & McClary's Protected Element. MClarys Electric Range London, Toronto, Montreal, Winnipeg, Vancouver, : St. John, N.B., Hamilton, Calgary, Saskatoon Edmonton. ---- NURSE BRAVES DEATH. That She May Bring Comfort to In- Jured Miners. Cumberland, B.C., Sept. 2. --. Nurse Belloti is the heroine of tha mine disaster which claimed 15 lives at No. 4 pit of the Dunsmuir Col- lieries. Two miles from the surface, at the far 8nd of the big mine, an ox- plosion had hurled down tons of coal and rock, burying more than 40 Dr. E. W. Hicks, the first and after the alarm was sounded, pre-| pared to make a trip down the shaft | to bring aid to the wounded. As he | entered the skip to descend Nurse | Belloti climbed in beside him. | "I know I am needed down there," | she sald. | She was warned that there wax danger of another explosion and that the rescue party faced possibilities of | another cave-in, which would mean death. " But she refused to stay Hn the surface, until the wounded men | had been extricated and brought up. She went down and assisted the res- cuers and then with deft hands and untiring patience rendered first aid to the unfortunate miners, whose limbs had been torn and their bodies lacerated when the roof and walls of the drift caved in on them. 200-305 Queen Street FROST'S PHONE 52¢ MOTOR OAR REPAINTING \ The S8ame Superfine Lasting Finish The Best is the Cheapest--The Lustre Lasts Mathieu's Syrup oF TAR & Success at Examination. The staff of the Deseronto school learn with high pleasure of tha the lower school examination. He succeeded in the eight subjects on which he wrote, winning three sac- ond class honors, one third and fous passes, Joe, who is only thirteen years of age, was a student at Deser- onto high school until Easter wneh he went to New Hamburg. NR op FALL BRINGS FORTH A VARIETY OF PRETTY, NEW PATTERNS IN . WOMEN'S FOOTWEAR Our new Shoes for early Fall have just been received and em- brace the best of the new popular ideas in Pumps and Oxfords. Excellent in quality. The Sawyer Shoe Store | Phone 159 184 Princess St. A --------------i. Sr -- - IEA i i KINGSTON [NDUSTRIAL FXuiiioN SEPT. 19-20-21.22-23 . $20,000.00 IN PREMIUMS, ETC. The Prize List has been extended, the speed programme enlarged. The second largest Carnival Company in America has been secured. Your co-operation is urged and pon you will be glad you have helped to make it such a good FAIR after 1 is over. REDUCED RAILWAY RATES ON ALL RAILROADS, Ask your Station Agent. of date entry fees will be doubled. 5 Hog TO" re cordially invited (0 write for a prize "BIG FAIR": Adults, 35c.; Children, |0c. Automobiles and Carriages, 50c." Evening: Adults, 25¢. . BENJAMIN WHITNEY, Bog. 168 York Street, City You

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