£ I 1 SATURDAY, MAY 17, 192s THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG Check Your Nose Cold ®; Relief in 5 Minutes If a friend told you of a simple "remedy that would clear away your sniffling cold quickly--you would go to the nearest druggist for that rem- edy---sure you would. The quickest remedy for a cold is CATARRHOZONE. You get instant effect from Catarrhozone, because you breathe it. Every breath you draw - through the little inhaler carries a healing antiseptic vapor that can't fail to clear the nose, throat and breath- ing organs. By using Catarrhozone several times each day you ward off Tonsili- tis, Catarrh, Influenza -- you keep clear of Sore Throat, Hoarseness and other winter ills. No medicine to take--just a sooth- ing vapor to breathe. You can use Catarrhozone at night in bed, use it 4.10 church, in the movie, on the street #. ruse it .with the first sneeze or sliver. Complete outfit $1.00; small 'Size 50 cents, at all dealers in medi- "eine, or The Dr. Hamilton Pill Co., *'811 Notre Dame St. West, Montreal. NOTICE. A Change Of Time Will be made BUNDAY, MAY 18th, 1924. "oo. For full particulars apply to any "Ticket Agent. "Restore Your Glands Youthful vigor and a fresh grip on life comes from renewed and reanimat- ed glands. It can be done. Free, a sample of Dr. Alexander's Vitalex Tab- lets, a remarkable Gland discovery. il No cost, no obligation, just send name and address to VITALEX LABORA- TORIES, 707 Bohan Bldg. Toronto. THOMAS COPLEY Carpenter. Phone 987 See us for all kinds of Carpentry Work. Estimates given om mew fi inid. Have your hardwood floors clean. » 3 with our mew foor cleaning ma- PHONE 316 'GODKIN'S LIVERY For Bus and Tax! Service, Buggies od And Saddle Horses Tun starts for Cataraqul Cemetery on Sunday, April 20th, at 1.45 p.m. Queen St, opposite St. Paul's church | GET IT REPAIRED wing Machines, Phonographs, Guus, Rifles repaired and refitted. Paris supplied. Saws filed, knives, Scissors and edge tools groumd. Locka repaired. Keys fitted to all Kinds of locks. All makes of Lawn Mowers sharpened and re- pal We can repair anything that is repairable. J. M. PATRICK 140 Sydemham Street, Kingston Phone 20365, Hard Wood Choice Body Hardwood. _Boft Mixed Wood. Kindling and Slabs; Chas. Bedore & Son 840 NELSON STREET Phone 1746J. | Sunday Services in Churches | | t St. Paul's--Holy communion, 11 a.m, Preacher, Canon FitzGerald, | M.A. Sunday school, 3 p.m. Even- {ing prayer, 7 p.m. Preacher, Canon | FitzGerald, M.A. Cooke's church, Brock a.m., "The Way to Real Life." 3 p.m., Bible school. 7 p.m., "Whom Does God Bother About Most?" Eyery- body welcome. St. Andrew's Presbyterian--Rev. John W. Stephen, minister. Services, 11 am. and 7 p.m., conducted by the minister. Students, soldiers and strangers cordially invited. Sunday school, 3 p.m. Calvary Congregational church-- (The friendly church), corner of Bagot and Charles streets. Special re-opening services, Sunday, May 18th, at 11 a.m, and 7 p.m. Preacher, Rev. T. W. Jones, M.A.,, Montreal. You are invited to both services. Princess street Methodist church ~--Rev.' John K. Curtis, B.A., minis- ter. 11 a.m., Rev. W. Powell, B.A., M.D., will preach. 7 p.m., Mr. C. J. Bell, of Toronto. Subject, "The Com- ing Referendum." Sunday school at the usual hour. Seats free. Cordial invitation to visitors. 8t. George's Cathedral--8 a.m., holy communion; 11 a.m., holy com- munion. Preacher, Rev. Montague Cyril Bickersteth, M.A., C.R., of Lon- don, Eng. 3 p.m, Sunday schools; 4 p.m., holy baptism; 7 p.m., even- song. Preacher, Rev. Montague Cyril Bickersteth, M.A., C.R. 8t, James® church, corner Union and Arch streets--T. W. Savarys rector, the rectory, 1562 Barrie street. 11 a.m., morning prayer and holy communion. Sermon subject, "No More Thirst." 3 p.m., Sunday school; 7 p.m., evening prayer. sermon, Sermon subject, "Re-unjon With | Rome." | -- | St. Luke's church, Nelson street-- Rev. J. dePencier Wright, M.A. { B.D., rector. Fourth Sunday after Easter. 8 a.m., holy communion; 11 a.m., morning prayer, 2.30 p.m., Sun- | day school and Bible classes; 4 p.m., holy baptism; 7 p.m., evening pray- Music--Anthem, 'He Liveth Unto God" (Simper). Seats free. Visitors and strangers cordially wel- come, | street-- | the Rev. T. J. 8. Ferguson, minister. 11 | Clement's Bible class; 3 p.m., Sunday { | | Public Schools May Prepare for Larger Life By the Rev. Charles Stelzle. | Chalmers church, corner Earl and Barrie streets--Minister, Emeritus, | Very Rev. Malcolm MacGillivray, | D.D. Minister, Rev. Geoorge A. Brown, M.A, B.D. 11 am. and 7 p.m., public worship - conducted by minister. 2 p.m.--Prof. Mac- school. Pentecostal Tabernacle, Queen | street, between Barrie and Division | --8ervices: Sunday, 11 a.m. 3, and 7.30 p.m.; Sunday school and Bible class, 2 p.m.; Tuesday, 8 p.m., evan- | gelistic, service; Thursday, 8 p.m. Divine Healing service; Sunday, 7.30 p.m., subject, '"The Love of God." Special singing by quartette. Strang- ers welcome, { -- | Christian Science, First Church of | Christ, Scientist, 95 Johpdon street --=Services, 11 a.m. and 7 p.m. Sub- | ject, "Mortals and Immortals," | Wednecday, 8 p.m., testimonial] meeting. Public reading room open! every afternoon except Sundays and | holidays from 3 to 5 p.m: and on| Thursday evenings from 7.30 to | 9.30 p.m. All ar8 cordially invited | to the services and to the reading room. » First Baptist church, Sydenham and Johnson streets--Rev, J. 8. La Flair, pastor. 10.30 a.m., prayer ser- vice; 11 a.m., sermon theme, "Un- derstanding God." 2.45 p.m., Bible school; 7 p.m., sermon theme, "Ex- pediency or Conscience." Moras preacher, the pastor. Evening preadh- er, Mr, J. N. MacMurchy. The ordin- ance of the Lord's Supper will be ob- served, following the evening ser- vice, -- Bethel Congregational, corner Barrie and Johnson streets--Sunday, May 18th, Jubilee anniversary, spec- eee FIRE SALE Rugs, Carpets, and Linoleums OUR SLAUGHTER SALE OF RUGS, CARPETS AND LINOLEUMS WILL BE CONTINUED FOR THE WEEK OF MONDAY, MAY 19th, UNTIL SATURDAY, MAY 24th. ALL RUGS MUST BE CLEARED OUT. Bargains - Bargains fal preacher, Rev. George A. Mac- Kenzie, of London, Ont. 11 am.,| subject: "A Godly Poet's Restrospect | of Life." 7 p.m. subject: "A Touch- | ing Incident in Our Lord's Earthly! Ministry." 3 p.m., open session of the Sunday school addressed hy Mrs, G. A. MacKenzie; Monday, 6.30 p.m., anniversary supper; Tuesday, Wed- | nesday and Thursday at 8.30 p.m, | special services addressed hy Rev. G.| A. MacKenzie. The choir, male] quartette and Dr. A. B. Haffner will sing at the Sunday services. All are welcome. .} | It isn't so long ago that it was all | trial city, given over almost entirely | the public school, or even to question its methods. The little red school- house had been -idealized, It was the Pphckbone of our American civil- fzation and progress. 'But within recent years the one- |room schoothouse has become the {target not only of the critic outside the school, but also of those who are most vitally and most personally in- terested in our scheme of public edu- cation. | The tendency in the rural district {has been toward centralization. In- " |stead of conducting fourteen district {schools in a more or lgss efficient manner, with fourteen buildings to heat and care for and about fourteen different grades in each of the four- teen schools, to-day fourteen wagons gather together the school children in each of the fourteen districts, and carry them to a carefully 'graded school in town, where these neatly three hundred country children have all the advantages of city schools. In former days many of them were compelled to'walk several miles in {all kinds of weather. Now, they are picked up in the front of their ---- ---- Hemsley & Son WATCHMAKERS Try Us for Watch and Clock Repairs 109 BROCK STREET Phone 2000w. Grind Qur x . This branch of our Optical Service is highly important. : It helps us to help you--quickly and satisfactorily. It is an indication of "|commertial life. {own h , carried to the school- house in town, and safely returned' with warmth and comfort. This is |a sign of progress. When one 'considers the curricu- lum in the average public school, whether it is in the city or the country, there is still much to ques- tion. Even the school in the rural district looks toward life in the city, and the schools in the city rarely prepare the scholars for the tasks which will inevitably become theirs }in industrial and commercial life, Originally education was intended for priests and the leisured class. It was mostly cultural. It has been very difficult to break away from this system. Only about six per cent. of the childrea in the public schools go to college, and ninety- four per cent. go into industrial and But as a matter of fact, the curriculum is framed up almost entirely to meet the needs of the six per cent. that go to col- lege. Evidently, the children of the working man aren't getting a square deal. Comparatively little attention is given to vocational guidance and industrial education, and 'no effort is made to put imagination or romance into industry, g In a combaratively small indus- curriculum that such scholar's education, for if is as life | that one's life was worth to criticise to a single industry in which most | of the people in the town were in | some way engaged, one would think | that some kind - of training which | would equip the boys and girls in| that town for more efficient; enlight- ened service would be introduced. | But there wasn't a suggestion in the | an industry | was In evidence, There was abso- | lutely no relationship between the | school and the employer of most of | the school's graduates. The course! of study in the school was just as! applicable to life in Timbuctoo. f When the average boy goes to work he' simply hunts a "job." He will hold it until he is about nineteen or twenty when the boss will dis- | charge him to hire a younger Soy. There was no chance for advance- ment, and so the boy who had spent four years or so in this establish- ment finds himself in a blind alley. Now, if he were an Edison or a Car- negle he would burrow his way out. But he isn't--he's just an ordinary boy. Just the kind of a boy for whom our public schools should be organized. In a recent study of a moderate- sized city |* was discovered that of those afrested during the year fully fifty per cent. were laboring men-- that is, those who have no trales-- and men of no occupations. , It Is quite likely that even a larger per- centage of those arrested were with- out trades. What is commonly called *"voca- tional guidance" and "industrial education" in the average public school is simply mannual training, which, while it undoubtedly is of value to those who are to become mechanics, does not begin to meet the require:ieants. There should be a systematic, continuous process of education which will definitely indicate, to a boy or a girl the task for which he or she is best fitted--in so far as this is possible. It is, of course, a most dificult undertaking to work out such a plan with absolute ac- curacy; but the public schools in ost of our cities do notsbegin to meet the situation, ee Cultural training, undoubtedly, is of supreme Importance in every is enriched, and as one learns to see things, that one becomes most effici- ent and one's value to society in- creases. But there is no reason and true efficiency. : Come to us for quick service. R. ARTHEY, Ro. Ha racoas stam Newcastle United winning team which is touring Bare ope were defeated by a Spanish "eleven at Bilbao, Spain, Monday by All Nations Marching to Armageddon But "Millions Now Living Will Never Die." INTERNATIONAL SEATS FREE. ¥ STUDENTS" ASSOCIATION Ta 0 AT 3.00 PM: \ a : | wear a white collar, Hanley, C.P. & T. A. Kingston, Ont._ y Ticker! AAAS T.F. Harrison Co. li. 'PHONE 90. why this may not be combined with even the commonest task' in. daily life. The fact that a mam is a farmer or a machinist does not necessarily preclude his having a vision that extends beyond his daily work, Indeed, there is no limit tol the possibilities in this direction; | but the tendeney in the average pub-; lic school to-day is to give an infer-| icr place to the boy who is to ve-| me a mechanic, until he himself! comes to believe that to be a clerk | in a store of'an office, Whére he can | is infinitely; better than to wear the overalls,| even though he will recéive twice as much '""wages' 'as a mechanic as he! may receive "salary" as a clerk. The public school may immensely increase the dignity of manual toil, | and no other institution can posst-| bly do more in this direction. WHEN B | When the baby Js ill; when he] cries a great deal and no amount of | attention or petting makes him happy, Baby's Own Tablets should be; given him without delay. The Tab-| lets are a mild but thorough laxa- tive which regulate the bowels and wh | | sweeten the stomach and+*thus drive out constipation and indigestion; | break up colds and simple fevers and make teething easy. They are abso-| lutely guaranteed to be free from opiates and narcotics and can be giv- en to even the new-born babe with| perfect safety and always with bene-| ficial results. The Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Wil-| Jiams' Medicine Co, Broekville, Ont. At Little Expense, How hospitality is being showered upon the fair Belleville Courier is shown by the fact that up to a day! or two ago Miss Gwan Lazier has only been able to spend twenty-four dollars, and that upon her horse. It is as'difficult for her to spend money as it is for some to geb\along with- out it. . For the convenience of delegates attending the above conference, the Canadian National Railways are op- erating special train from Toronto to Owen Sound on Wednesday, Jun: 4th, leaving Union Station at 12.39 p.m. standard time, arriving Owen Sound 5.45 p.m. : | Accommodation of the very best hés been arranged for the comfort and convenience of the delegates. Train will have standard Canadian National Railway equipment high class vestibule coaches, dining ang! parior cars. | For full particulars apply to J. P. | THE BATTLE AGAINST. TUBERCULOSIS (Continued from Page 1.) How Iuféction Occurs. There has been considerable con- troversy concerning the manner by which the tubercle : bacillus galus entry into the human system, some authorities favoring the ingestion theory, others that of inhalation. Ex- periments have proven that infec- tion may occur in both ways. The dust infection theory of Cornet and the droplet infection theory of Mug- ge are well known t6 medical men. The former investigator working on guinea pigs showed that infection could take place from inhalation of a dusty atmosphere, . Containing large number of bacilli, the latter demonstrated the presence of infec- tion resulting from the use of sprays containing numerous tubercle baecilil. Latterly some authorities are of tae opinion that bacilli taken into the mouth with the food ete., and swal- lowed, probably cause igfection of- tener than does inhalation. It is suf- ficlent for our purpose to say that probably the great majority of in- dividuals acquire infection by the bacillus entering the mouth or nose. From either portal of entry there are various avenues leading to the lungs Or to other organs of the body. It is considered that infection usually' occurs before the age of fif- teen, although it is admitted that both infection and disea: , may, and do occur in later life. Let us confine our remarks for the present to the manner of infection of children-- from the babe in arms to the boy or girl of fifteen years of age--and tet us first seek the source of infection. All of us have seen the thoughtless individual walking along the strest expectorating here and there as he goes. That individual may have Tub- erculosis, and if he be what is com- monly known as an open case, his sputum will be loaded with tubercle bacilli. Now, it does not require any | 8reat stretch of the imagination io show how others may become fnfect- ed from this source of infection. It is carried into your house on the shoes of the butcher, the baker "or others, and the child creeping about the floor soon comes in contact with ne it. Again, the small boy or girl piay- ing marbles in the gutter or skipping on the sidewalk come in contact with it. The older boy playing ball in the park or play grounds, is constantly coming in contact with the sputum of the careless individual. The fing- ers become contaminated and "tis but a short distance from the fingers to the mouth. Hence, infection occurs. Infection From Within. But the source of infection is not always outside the household, prob- ably it is oftener from within. How many individuals when coughing or sneezing think to place a handker- chief in front of the mouth? The spray produced by a parent coughing or sneezing, is a source of infection to the babe in arms. If one or both parents are tuberculosis it is hard to conceive how the children can es- cape infection. They are being coa- stantly exposed and unless removed from the household, will almost certainly become infected, particul- arly if the mother is the victim of the didease. Thus we see that children are liable to {infection from sources within the household and also from without, and while, no doubt, they are often subject to contact with those individuals who are living in the same house whether they be im- mediate relatives or mot, sources of infection must not be overlooked. Too often people remark that thefs never was any Tuber. culosis in their families and im- mediately dismiss the subject from their minds as being of no Interest to them. They fail to realize that they and their children are daily coming in comtact with tuberculosis in some form or other. This fact should not be overlooked. Many infected individuals of to- day wil be the tube cabot of ths future, The seed sown in early lite may lie dormant for many years but when the child reaches early man- hood or womanhood at the time of greatest strain on the system, much of it will bear fruit and the previous- ly healthy individual become a vie- tim of tuberculosis. Many Cases Here, da There areymany cases of tuber. culosis in our midst. There are many more cases of potential tuberculosis. These patients cannot be cared for in their homes. The great majority of 7', other on them cannot obtain the treatment necessary to bring them back 'to health, strength and eventually ale low them to return to their occupa- tions. Those who are wealthy have their choice of various institutions and health resorts throughout the Continent. The tuberculous individ- ual who cannot pay his way, but is forced to carry on to provide a liv- ing for himself or family is, in most instances doomed. In years gone by the South West was looked upon as the mecca for the tuberculous, now it is generally recognized that sufferer from tub- erculosis should seek treatment in the locality where he intends to spend his life. Equally as good re- sults have been obtained in the East as in the West. Adequate sanatorium provision shoul be made for the in- digent tuberculous, for the sanator- ium alone offers the necessary facill- ties for giving proper treatment to those who are unable to pay their way. Many, institutions to-day are flourishing largely as the resalt of philanthropic endeavor and are do- Ing a great work but they are unable to care for all who are in need of treatment. Unless the state comes to the rescue, many must perish for want of the care which the sanator- ium offers. To an old lady or an invalid a gentleman offers his arm if either of them| wants his support. Otherwise 4 # lady no longer leans upon a gentle- man in the daytime. ------------ I. will not change a cottage in possession for a kingdom in revere sion. * Riches formerly had wings, bat now they Have wheels. 3 », A. H. FAI Ee i teed x to the Kingsto the best. - Professor of i we a_i every bottle is from our own stable. ofthe city. from J oe cows. Not pasteurized or steril- : General Hospital, an institution of attendants, Sanitation, Sterilizatio supervision of Dr. Miller, Professor of Pathalof , under the 's Pathology, TELEPHONE 1105 R-3.