Daily British Whig (1850), 5 Sep 1922, p. 13

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ASA ET -- - bboy Jor friends going to or returning from [3 2 isms poi TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1023. ] THE DAILY BRITISH _WHIG. i |e TRE Ts | AGENCY FOR ALL OCEAN STEAMSHIP LINES Special aftention given your family | * [Ratph Winters left for the west last | Monday. Mrs D. McKim entertained [a number of the W.C.T.U. ladies on | Wednesday last. Mr. and Mrs. Tim- fon and daughter spent a couple of { From the (Countryside, days last week gt Thurlow Mr. and |Mre. Richmond are spending a few | idays at L. Fox's. The threshing ma- r [clines are quite plentiful arounl {here and the grain is turning out |well.. J. Armstrong has bought a [house in Deseronto and intends mov- ---- irg soon. A number from here in- ARDEN. tend taking in the fair at Toronto. Fot informdtion and rates apply tay Aug. 31.--Quite a number from | Visitors: Mr, and Mrs. Bell at H. Ab- J. P. HANLEY, G.P. and T.AGT. Ry.|nere attended the ball game in Tam- bott's; Mr. and Mrs. Boyce at L. Kingston, Ont | worth on Aug. 30th, which was a dls-' Innis'; Miss Gladys Sharpe and Open aay and night. | appointing game. Both teams play-|brother at Mrs. D. Wieese's; Mr, as) 'PHONE 99 |ed very poor ball. Miss Pearl Pips|Mrs. Pringle and Mrs. Dedine an * {and Miss Myrtle Gurnesey, Dead |Mr. and Mrs. G. Arnold and family | Creek, spent the past few days with at C. Arnold's; Miss Alma Wood at their aunt, Mrs. H. Steele. Mis. IA. Wood's; Mr, File and daughter at {Luke Thompson and two children!J. Gnu's. | spent Baturday and Sunday at Port] | Hope. Jack Morgan and sister Bat. ty, Roslin, at C. M. Green's. Miss Annie Gendrow and brother was | Montreal to Glasgow | Tamworth, are spending a few days | Frontenac the Old Country. r ANCHOR ANCHOR-DONALDSON Lanark : |in town. Mrs. Frank Gurnesey, | oe prow ge Canes Dead Creek, at Mrs. H. Steele's on FALL RIVER. Te Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. 8. Alex] Aug. 30.--The weather is getting Heontreal to Liverpool | ahder is spending two weeks visiting | 8. tomnHke. The farmers are Zest. on IAN. ola *vAvsonialat Myrtle Station, Burketoa Junction | a "with their harvest- Oct, 28 WARD eens Tyrrhenia | 40d Toronto. Mrs. Adam Ackey, Su!- ing. A number from here attended Peon | Phide, talled at Mrs. H. Hannah's Onfive social in Maberly last Saturday Hemre) "> ai Shathours |Fuesday. Clarke Alexander, Port evening. Miss Jessie McFarlane and Sept. 9/0ct. 14|Nov. 18 ...... Antonia} Hope, spent Sunday at his homs | ce Elsie Duffy have gone to Perth. Sipt. solo. 4 ........... Andante Bere. Mr. and Mrs. Archibald God-) go rvice was held in the school house |frey, Mount Vale, at Mrs. Fred Gen. last Wednesday evening by Rev. Mf. N. Y. to Queenstown and Livespooi |dron's on Sunday. 'Aug. 31i8ept. 28|0ct. 26 --------~cythla | \ Sept. 7|Oct. § Bépt. 14]0¢t. 13 ia Carmania | Aug. 2 SEL ERVILLE. | Ruby Warwick were visiting friends * Also sallg from Boston Sept 1. | from here at- | this vicinity last week; Mr. and {Lehigh and was largely attended. { Visitors: Mrs. John McConnell and {tended the harvest home dinner held fd N, Y., Cherbourg & Southampton [at Battersea yesterday. Mrs. George McFarlane spent Sunday vr ari, Sept, 12i0¢k | 2 34. Auitania | outs Bas Den thoroughly cleaned Mrs. Davison and rMs: Frank John- * Does rot call at Cherbourg i | st t th eek-end at the homo {Bept. 5th. Mr. Joyce, Kingston, has| tO" Spent the week-e a The school { Ve. *Sept. 2|Sept. 22/0ctr oo. | afternoon at Matthew Ferguson's; Blom the opening on! y » i ts, Mr. and Mrs. Archie N. Y, Fiz, Cherbourg and Hamburg |, through here this week buying| Ol 'her parents, Mr. a 4b : saronia | jray. Mrs. W e n- Sept dot 10 Hoi) ron cattle. Miss Bertha Sleeth is visit-| Tu a Nosisy 83d lam. OAL vr rrneranraan {Ing friends in Kingston. Miss Mild-| 00 week. Wedding bells will soon Boston -- Liverpool -- Queenstown |red Anglin left yesterday to spend af, "oo in this vicinith Sept 20 ......... s-+«.Tyrrhenia fgee gayy at Bath. Mrs. Wales, Seel-| ene 3 Oh 39 .ovvirininnncninnnni, Samaria | gyre Bay, is visiting at Charles | N. Y. te Glasgow (via Moville) |Clark's. Mrs. Bdward Andrews and' BOL. 3 ....o.. via City of London | gon John, spent a day recently at Sept. 9jO6t. 7 ........0uinn, Cameronla| James White's. Mr. and Mrs. Wal. Sept. 18/0ct, 14/Nov. 11 ......Columbla | ior Paper and Miss Clara Taber, Ath- Township Comncils K BB erin Algetia ens, spent the week-end at J. BE N. ¥, to MEDITERRANEAN Anglin's. The Misses Maudie and! ---- Rot. 24 Crulsdy, ne ; i Tpacania | Nellle Thomas and Master Willie PORTLAND. Nov, 28 (Crue) o........... Scythia | Thomas, Kingston, are visiting at Harrowsmith, Ont.,, Aug. 28. -- Dec. 8 (Cruise) Tuscania | John Robb's. Mr. and Mrs. James Council met August 7th. Members Jan. 24 (Cruise) .n...oovnovnn... Samaria | Boal and family spent Sunday at| zl present. Minutes of iust meeting Feb. 10 (Cruise) ...... Caronis | Henry Scott's, Milburn. Miss Gracie | confirmed. James Alten was ap- Feb. 10--~(Crulse) .......... Mauretania | MeCormack, Kingston, has returned | pointed overseer of $240 expendi- | home after spending her holidays at|ture on Truscott hill. A by-law was | David Sleeth's. Master Robert An- passed fixing the rate of taxation for {8lin, Kingston, at J. E. Anglin's. 1922 as follows: For county pur- poses and good roads, 16 mills; township purposes, 7 raills; school A RRS dilekt 20d turvhee THE ROBERT REFORDCO., Liven GENERAL AGENTS 50 KING STRERT EAST s ~ 3|rate, 8 mills; total rate, 313% mills, TORONTO, ONT. Lenn & Ad h | Accounts paid: $2.63, Melville 0X on Scales, repairs to High Falls bridge; | 3 | $56, Archie Goslin, repairs West- REMEMBER | brooke road; $4.25, Secord Storms, TAMWORTH. Aug. 30.--Rev. Mr, Clark is bonus 17 rds. wire fence: $9.18, W. to, B. Dalton & Co., oil; $6.25, Anson préach in the Presbyterian church on Grant, repairs to rqads; $2.30, J. E. It you want dobing dome, don't call on us, but If you want first-class decorating, then telephone 2090J. for Business. Bie Netldiing ha our Sunday next. D. R. Fletcher and, Freeman, repairs to roads; $15, Dr. W. H. FRANCIS family are attending the Toronto ex-. P. Day, sec. of cemetery fund, for 3 sixXTH ST, Fhone 20004, | | hibition. Smith and Robert Gilmour! cleaning township's portion of come . and family have just returned from| tery; $21, Sandy Storms. sheep kill- Pp Toronto. Mrs. J. A. Floyd and son, 'ed by dogs; $4.80, E. &. Campsall, { Clarence, are visiting Mr. and Mrs. | plank; $2, Andrew Armsirong, re- D. B. Floyd. William and James! pairing bridge; $10, John McKeever, {Huft and family and Miss Lemon, | drawing sand for tile: $22.95, Sam | Wilton, visited D. B. Floyd and fam-| Revell, making 63 cemen* tile; $5.- lly on Wednesday, There ' was al95, Earl Buck, repairs machinery; very large crowd from all parts GET IT REPAIRED . Sewing Machines, Phonographs, Glas, Rifles Fepaired and refitted, Parts supplied. Sans fled, knives, ot $11.25, Lewis Laveque, work on La- seissory of edge Ho gress. the country to see the baseball game; veque bridge; $2.46, Torouto Stamp Looks reptiréd. Keys fitted 0 on Wednesday which was played be-!& Stencil Works, dog tugs; $3.50, Su uingy of lochs. Sued ane ro: |[tween Sydenham and Tamworth.| Earl Revell, = work on Laveque puired. 9 -pephir atytning The score was 24 to 12 in favor ofi bridge; $15, A. W. Sirett, grant to hat is repairable J. M. PATRICK 1" SARS. Kingston Sydenham. J. A. Hunter and wife school fair; $18, Dillon & Milis, re- left on Monday last for Toronto to] pairs to Loughboro bdy.; $3, F. Cou- attend the exhibition, They went by sineau, damage to waggon, Lough- motor and will visit his brother, | boro - bdy. ; $146.40, John Tallen, William, at Manitou Island. pay list stone crusher; $378.40, C. W. Martin, pay lst crusher, Donnal- ly road. Council adfourned to meet in Verona, Monday, September 4th, 1 p.m. --THOS. A. KERR, ciork. SELBY, Aug. 31.--A number attended the Sunday school picnic on Wednesday at Parks Grove, Leonard Hudgin and SPECIAL SALE Double °' Diamoud Tires 30x3% ......$12.00 CORD TIRES | 30x34 ......$16.00 TUBES .... $1.75 = Larger sizes in proportion. UNLESS you see the name "Bayer" on tablets, you are not getting Aspirin at all Accept only an "unbroken package" of "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin," which contains dire and dose worked out by! physicians during 22 years and proved safe by millions for Colds Headache Rheumatism Toothache Neuralgia Neuritis Handy "Baer" bates of 12 tablats--Als6 bottles of 3 und-100--Driggiste. { } of | FREES 'see our : Cut Flowers and Funeral Desire a wpecialy. "PC LAWSON 4 AN OPEN LETTER ana To Rev. 8. D. Chown,.D.D., LL.D., General Superintendent of the Meth- od#st Church. in Canada. ] Dear Sir: Your statements re the Presbyter- 'ans and Church Union, at the dif- ferent Methodist Conferences during the present summer, and in a pastoral letter io the Methodist people in the Christian Guardian of June 28th, uit, have been carried by the public press far bevond the churches concerned. May a word from a different "point of view" bear them friendly company. (1) Presbyterian "Responsibility." You write_ "We will begin with the Presbyterian church since the Movement was instituted from that soprce. Methodism' cannot claim the honor or the responsibility of initiat- ing the negotiations, It was in the {year 1902, at our own general oon- | ference in Winnipeg, that proposals were made by the representatives of odist church to appoint a committee for the"purpose of negotiating terms of union." In 1902, as you have stated, your conference met in Winnipeg. Some Presbrterians 'brought fraternal groatings. One of them, the late Principal Patrick, afterwards writes In the Presbyterian in substance as follows: -- -- "I reserved myself to the las-. The others gave the usual greetings in the usual way, Whén my turn came, without consulting my colleagues, without a hint to them of my in'en- tion, I threw myself into church union and urged it with all my strength. When the moeting was over, some members of the confer- ence came "0 me and asked if many in our church were of that mind. 1 said to them, "I do not know, I speak only for myself. You can ask them {and find out." | In the followifig year, our assem- | bly, (See Minutes, 1903)) received a | message from the Methodist church, Strongly pro-unfon, stating 'hat it had appointed a committee "to con- fer with committees that may be ap- pointed" by the other churches. The assembly "ook no 'section but simply referred the message to ite committee on correspondence. Next year, 1904, the message was again" before the assembly with the urge that to decline the proposal for a commitiee to confer would not be courteous to a sister church. The action of the essemibly was as foi- lows (sée Minutes, 1904): "The genera] assembly thanks the general comference of the Methodist church for their courtesy in trans- mitting to thém a copy of the resolu- tion on church union adopted by the conference at its meeting in Septom- ber, 1902. "The gemerdl assembly, in re sponse, appoints commitiee on union, with Instructions to consider the practicability of such a union, and to confer with similar commit- tees of the Methodist, Congregational and any other churches, and to re- port to the next general assembly." (2) Presbyterian "Rights." You say "We are well aware that there is opposition wi'hin the Presby- terian church." "In our judgment, however, there are limits of propriety that should be observed in the actiwi- ties of the opposition. From our point of view it seems that they have a right to withdraw from any ar- rangement made to carry out the will of the general assembly, but not to biock the consummation of ifs de- clared purpose." The inistake here #s in judging the "rights" of Presbyterians dn their own church from what you call "our point of view." The "Hights," of the Methodist and the, Presbyterian peo- ple in their own churches are widely different . The Methodist church is incorporated. It is a legal entity, Its general conference, with certain limits, has power to transfer he church and its ¢ivil rights and pos- sessions whether it will, and the only alternative for the Methodist people Who do not wish to 'be 'ransferred is to "withdraw." . The Presbyteridn chufeh is not in- corporated. It is not a legal entity. {1t is simply a Christian organization, with a general assembly shosen '0 legislate within and for that organiz- ation, and pledged to "maintain and defend the same'; But with no power to disband or to trarsfer 'he evil rights to another who do not wish to 1 T0DR CHOWN | the Presbyterian church to the Meth- | ways protested disbanding their church by ome-third of her mamber- {3hip;--and have as constantly declar- own church, in unity and co-operation {with other-evangelical churches. ition the "good faith" towards the Methodist church, of shose who have done their utmost to accede to her {request? If some of them in their zeal have resolved that they cannot perform, it is not a question of "'eth:- cal" but of physical limitation; and Your suggestion of lack of "good {faith" towards the Methodist church cannot surely refer to them, after their efforts through the years "in response" to the initial action ana proposal of that church. (4) "The Religio-Political Reaim." You further write--'l would say with all conviation that if the major churches of Protestantjém cannot unite, the battle which is going on for the religlous control of our coun- Ary will be lost in the next few years. I refer not to the school question only, but to the whole Movement within Canada in the religlo-pclitical | realm." Thank you very miuch for this frank forecast of the proposed mer- | &er; not a church, but a relglo-politi- cal "machine, incorporated, as pro- vided in the basis of union, to "bat- tle" . . .."4n the religio-political realm" for "reéligio-political" ends, at "he bidding of its central author- ity. You have here given Presbyterians an added imperative to continue their own beloved church, with Christ her "only King and Head," a church wnese tu'ssion and work is not '"'re- .igio-political," but to win men and women :c Him, and then, a: Ch -lstian citizevs; will they do their duty in the «iAle, (5) "he "Church of the Kature" On#e more you writé-- "We caniot g0t a urited world with a sriritually divided and broken chris'enicin"--- and again--'"How can a divided church speak with good effect to a future united world." Evangelical Christendom is not "spiritually divided and broken," and if it were, a big "religio-politi- calal" compress, forcing it into one lends. would for "religio-political" ends would not make i any more | spiritually one. World conventions and confer- |ences, the World's Evangelical ANi- ance, the great bible and missfonary societies, the thousands of more local tinities, the fraternal intercourse and co-operation in good work every- where, have been proclaiming to 'he world for generations that evangel- cal christendom is spiritually one, more truly one than when the church 'Was one great organization' in the religio-political realm," 'and the heads of the church made and un- made kings at will, n Christendom i8 now united in the way the best statesmen are seeking a united world, not a world under cén- tral control, which Germany sought in vain, but peoples gnd nations; self- determining, Mving in wmity and peace. Even the British Isles after centuniés of central control, are divid- ing into self-determining parts, in the hope of a peace and unity whch could not otherwise be attained. Qf the two ideals of the church--a great organization under dentral con. trol, and a great Christian brother- hood, grouped and named as they nay ohoose, living in uni'y, one in Christ Presbyterians in Canada have chosen the latter, and purpose with His Guidance and help to fol- low it. With thanks to the British Whig for courtesy of space, and bes' wishes for the great Methodist church and for all of every name who seek to uplift humanity by the uplifted christ, 1 remain, yours truly, --B, SCOTT. Montréal, Aug. 30th, 1922. Whatever enlarges hope will also exalt courage, to your druggist The simplest way to end a corn is Blue-jay. touch stops the pain instantly. Then the corn ns and comes out. Made in a colorless clear liquid (ome drop does itl) in extra thin plas- ters. action is the same, Pain Stops Instantly ed»their purpose 'o continue their | On the other hand you cannot qués- : | i sageseinp 0 ALS i hest For 20 Years T is characteristic of pares : ¢ Rr poorer ih Pou to look | sad ner x back over the days that are gone 3 and thoughtfully live Bn 3 Ry er nccutary whos My Jnowledge of medicine op If in the little drug store { owned - Tn at alive, 0.4 making and selling my over gual compound De] friends and rend an Dr. Lewis Medicine or stoma ives and Bowel Complaints. And npwas 1 Sud 3 fe For my . many years while I was perfecting my formula 1 stodied snd in 1k Jazatives and cathartics on the became convinced that their was not that they did nct act on he but that their action was too violent aa Was due to the fact that they were not Shotoush enough in their action, some Blas at to Simply seting on tre upper or small 'fntes- | $2 one 2 while others would act only on the Tn ; I or intestines, an: they . 8 invariably produced a habit re- quiring augmented doses. ifion $s 4 I believed that 2 Prebaration to produce the it Stiech Sisk rst one, ne Jiver, then act o mach and entire alimen- a Tr is was accomplished, the lc ro produce & ml but ee of the Waste without 2 Sxperimenting Hh hun of Hear pounds. last the Bs that truly bellove goes OT. LOUIS MO. SMITHS FALLS, ONT, GANY . MAHOOD'S DRUG STORE : : DCA A Tomorrow Ah Kl Cet a 25° Box 3 DID YOU EVER STOP TO THIN -- THAT some men wear long suffering faces all the tine. A THAT some men should quit hunting faults in other people, un- til they first correct their own faults. THAT visitors in your city should be astounded when they visit your city, by finding every citizen so kind and so anxious to make their visit a pleasant one. They should go away that your hotels are splendid, your stores are Aplandid, and rtesy {you to grow. {tha old. and comfort are to be found everywhere inf your city. Le THAT the smaller the mind, the syrer it is that it need n learn. DON'T HAVE SMALL MINDS IN YOUR CITY. THAT your city should blow its own horn; nobody else will do it for you. ( THAT your farmers must have prices and marketing conditions that will yteld enough-brofit to induce enough men to Stay on the farm and make farming their life wi k. THAT unless farmers prosper, no other line of industry cam = prosper. THAT with many people, an important question is how to invest - their savings. Keep your money in a bank or a building and loan company awhile and take plenty of time and i vestigate carefully before you put it elsewhere. IT 18 B. : TO BE SAFE THAN SORRY. THAT money comes mighty easy to some people, while others can only get it by hard work. a THAT some narrow-minded city-knockers may have a real sood sulphuric spot in Hades reserved for them, * / : THAT you can help your city by boosting her whénever and wherever you ean. : E. R. WAITE, Secretary, Shawnee, Oklahoma, Board of Commerte. The First Meal You Ever Had were' learaiag to walk. It b peare talks of the Seven Ages of Man, Milk is the best food for every age--for the young, the a quart 3 day--at any age from one t6 a hundred. oth 3 Milk was your first food. It gave you strength when you purest PASTEURIZED MILK fosures you of. the a

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