Daily British Whig (1850), 26 Jul 1924, p. 4

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

Sr : STOP! HAY FEVER Before It Commences sa powder, ined ia easily swallowed, oh z Generons sample for 4 cents in stamps. To sloop tonight use RAZ - MAH today Whether for temporary use or per- manent use; as a protection against the wind, the sun, or strong artifi- clal light-- 7 "OUR GLASSES -- both clear and tinted--are the latest products of optical science, < We invite your inspection. R. ARTHEY, RO. VISION SPECIALISY 148 PRINCESS STREET Phone 2108. Open evenings by appointment. Two Electric Specials Electric Curling Tongs. Special $1.75. Electric Irons Special $3.00, $4.50. ofa Look before you ere you leap. And look through the ads in the Whig's Classified Sec- tion before you spend your money. The un- usual offers there can help you to neat sav- ings. Read them to-day ! .Copright, 1924, by Basil L. Smith i THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG Sunday Services in Churches St. Andrew's Presbyterian--Rev. John W. Stephen, minister. Public worship, 11 a.m. and 7 p.m., con- ducted by the minister. Students and strangers cordially invited. Baptist church--Rev. J. 8. la Flair, minister. Union services with Cooke's church, 11 a.m., Cooke's church; 7 p.m., Rev. T. J. 8. Fergu- son. Everybody welcome, Bethel Congregational Church, 7 corner Barrie and Johnson streets-- Services, 11 am., and 7 y'm. Rev. J. A. Miller will preach at both ser- vices. Sunday scheol, 3 pm. Christian Endeavor society, Mon- day, 8 pm. 3 St. Luke's Church, Nelson street---- Rev. J. dePencier Wright, M.A., B.D., rector. Sixth Sunday after Trinity. 11 a.m., morning prayer; 4 p.m., holy baptism; 7 p.m., even- ing prayer. Seats free. Visitors and strangers cordially welcome. Cooke's Presbyterian church, Brock street--Rev. T, J. 8S. Fergu- son, BA. minister. Union services with Baptist church. 11 a,m., Rev. T. J. 8, Ferguson; 11 am. lantern pictures for the children; 7 p.m., Baptist church. Everybody welcome. Union .Service, Sydenham Street church and Chalmers Presbyterian church, in Sydenham street church. Services, 11 a.m. and 7 p.m. Dr. J. R. P. Sclater will preach in the morning and Rev. George A. Brown, M.A., B.D, in the evening. Come and worship. "A cordial invitation to summer students and strangers, St. James' church, corner Union and Arch streets--T. W. Savary, rec- tor, the rectory, 156 Barrie street. 8 a.m. holy communion; 11 am. morning prayer and sermon. Ser- mon subject, "The Miracle of the Loaves." 3 p.m. Sunday sehool; 7 p.m., evening prayer and sermon. Sermon subjéct, "He Restoreth My Soul." J Chalmers Church, corner Earl and Barrie streets--Minister Emeritus, Very Rev. Malcolm MacGillivray, D. D. 'Minister, Rev. Geo. A. Brown, M.A., B.D, During July Ohaimers and Sydenham street Methcdist church will hold union services in Sydenham street church, Worship, 11 a.m. and 7 p.m.,- conducted by the minister of Chalmers church. Gospel Hall, ground floor, Orange building---11 a.m. the Lord's Sup- per; 3 p.m., Sunday school and Bible classes; 7 p.m. gospel service. Plenty of singing, redemption hymns and gospel choruses which the Thomas Bros., will lead; short spirited ad- dresses. Miss Reynolds, who de- lighted the audience last Sunday aight, will again sing. Seat and a welcome for all. -- Onlvary Congregational Churche (The Friendly Church), corner of Bagot and Charles streets. Rev. Frank Sanders," minister. Union cervices with Zion Presbyterian church. Meeting during July in Cal- vary church, 11 a.m., "Life, the Gift of God." 8 p.m., Sunday school; 7 p.m., "The Challenge of Jesus." The minister at both services. A hearty welcome and helpful message. Christian Science, First Church of Christ, Scientist, 95 Johnson street-- Service, 11 a.m. Subject, "Truth." Wednesday, 8 p.m., testimo- nial meeting including testimo- nies of healing through Christian Science. Free public reading room where the Bible and all authorized Christian Science literature may be read, borrowed or purchased, open every afternoon except Sundays and holidays, from 3 'to 5 p.m. and on Thursday evenings from 7.30 to 9.30. All are cordially invited to the services and to make use of the reading room. DIED IN MINNESOTA. George Cloakey Was a Former Resi. dent of Hartington. Hartington, July 23.--Milton Cloakey received word today of the death of his only brother, George, in Minnesota on Sunday. He lived here till a young man, going west over forty years ago. Mrs. James Sproule, Westbrooke, is visiting her brother, Milton Cloakey. Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Woodman and Minnie, Miss Lillie Woodman, Wolfe Island, visited at B. Campsall's on Sunday. Congratulations are extended to the entrance class, who all success- fully passed their examinations: Keith Leonard, Lloyd Babcock, Gor- don Moore, Norman Ryan, also the teacher, Miss Elsa Craig. Samuel Freeman and wife, after : : i 0 ei f BEAD Shale ---- an absence of some years in the Unit- ed States, are visiting his brothers. Mrs. McQuaid, Kingston, Fred Clow, wife and baby, Kingston, at David Freeman's. Mrs. Gertie Shangraw, Bydenham, spent the week-end with her sister, Mrs. Roy Leonard, Miss Aleda Gates, Cataraqui, visiting Madolia Babcock, has returned home. Mrs. Robeson and daughter, Miss Mattie, Ottawa, here renéwing acquaintanc- es. They lived in the parsonage over twenty-five years ago. Some have finished their haying; harvesting has commenced of fall grain, Miss Eileen 'Wright, King- ston, is spending her holidays at George Trousdale's, Charles Jamie- son at Odessa with his aunt, Were Quietly Married. Adolphustown, July 23.--Hay har- vest is about complete but grain cutting has begun, Dr. D. Allison and family, Camden, N.Y., have been ) rengwing acquaintances here. Mr. and Yrs. C. F. Allison, Mrs, G. N. Davis'd@nd Mrs. C. R. Allison motor- ed to Port Perry for the week-end. Miss S. Price, Selby, is the guest of her sister, Mrs, W. Magee, Miss An- nabella Dickson was the week-end guest of Miss Audrey Ruttan. We are sorry to report Mrs. R. M. Rob- lin and Mrs. F. E. Foster on the sick list. Miss Edna Magee, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Magee, and Floyd Vanness, Enterprise, were quietly married at the bride's home on Wednesday and left for an extend- ed motor trip. The ceremony was performed by Rev. H. B. Neal. $50 or Can't Leave. Any German wishing to go abroad for pleasure must pay $50 for per- mission to leave the country, the cabinet has decided. No person wil be allowed to take more than $50 in German money or foreign money to the value of $76 across the border. Viewpoints. Mose--G'wan, yo' boastin' boy! Whah's yo' fine job now? Ah heard yo' was fired f'um de Fust National Bank. ; % Sam---Mebbe. But Ah chooses to say Ah was promoted; Ah is now jaintin' fo' de Second National Bank. the German Ds 2 w as junk, oa battleship Hindenburg for -------- x literary topics of which this is the of a certain fiery intensity, occupation with mundane things, avowed independent. While Error hour, as being indeed the very life Is Canada destined to be to the literature of America what Scotland was_for a long period to the litera- ture of Great Britain ? The danger which has never quite ceased to threaten all art in England is an hereditary timidity in the presence of the august conventions, while the art of America is continually appre- hensive of falling into the pitfall of an utter licentiousness of form and treatment. When the academic soul of Eng- land could find absolute horror in a faulty rhyme, when she boasted of the numbers of years that Thomas Gray "sacrficed at the shrine of one poem, when the regularities of a Popean brood had utterly dismayed the heart of Pan, one Robert Burns of Seotland rhymed "drumlie" with "Montgomery" and "beastie" with "hasty" and blasphemed every little tin god which England had set up on the road to rhythm. The rhyming of "drumlie" with "Montgomery" was a proclamation of emancipation to the poets of Eng- land and the straight-jackets of a grammarian tendency were greatly loosened. The greatness of a poet is scarcely less exemplified in his own work than in his influence upon the period in which he writes. Cow- per the liberator will be remember- ed as long as Cowper the poet. His hand can be felt even at this date in the rebellion of the group of Georgians, - . * + If you bind a dance or a, poem qr a painting or any other. artistic thing to a medley of laws the result will be a lessening of rhythm and a declining of thought. When Burns threw overboard the conventions his verse flowed as musically as "Sweet Afton" itself and his thought almost supplanted the Westminster Confes- sion, Without a doubt the spirit of protest of the ploughman of Ayr Is more Intimate to-day to the heart of Scotland than any profound utter- ance of Calvin or Knox. Yet, while English poetry has al- ways taken more from Scottish poetry than it has given; In prose the debt is undoubtedly reversed. The lyric of a garden of roses needs the lyric of rocks and barenness to waken it from its utter complacency, but prose, needing no more rugged- ness than it naturally possesses, is benefited by an environment of tender skies and balmy breezes. Over austerity seldom threatens verse but continually endangers prose. Thus the north always nfluences the south nh poetry, and the south invariably CORNS SOFTEN IN FOOT BATH Hot water extraction of corns and callouses offers the perfect way to rid yourself of painful troubles. Take just a minute or two and spread a few drops of Putnam's Painless Corn Extractor over the sen- si surface of the corn or callous, and the pain is stopped at once. Then will forget your corns, because they will not pain. Later you use a hot foot bath for five or Corn erumples u strking figures in the:literary world of the dominion. nearly all of his colleagues in the poetic doubtless of Celtic origin, which contrasts markedly with the prevailing calm and respectability, tempt for the hard, economic worldliness of a new is mingled with an equally passionate love for. the physical aspects of the new its close contact of man with nature, endurance. He is thus a thoroughly Canadian poet, perhaps the most widely Canadian, the least loos! and lived all over the place, from Victoria to Montreal. conceive him 'accepting a civil service job; he is the began promulgating that doctrine in Canada he than he is to-day: . The Whig commends these tion of all who feel the need of a truly Canadian literary expression. A CANADIAN VIEWPOINT | The Parallel of Scotland and Canada Wilson MacDonald, the author of the series of articles on Canad'an first instalment, is one of the most He differs from art in Canada in the possession A passionate con- continent, for the pre- land, for its spaces, its freedom, its power of testing courage and parochial, of all our poets. He has One simply cannot born wanderer, the One of the earliest and most imitative poems in his first volume ('"The Song of the Prairie Lard," Kingston in 1909, and is a thoughtful Whip-Poor-Will," whose "one simple 'song" teaches us that "Truth doth ever to one message hold, chants a throng." He has always been an earnest thinker on the regards Poesy as something far more than the Toronto, 1918) is dated at and beautiful apostrophe to "The subject of Poesy, one who mere amusement of an idle of a nation's heart. . When he first was a good deal more lonely articles to-the careful atten- dominates the "north in the more rigid form of expression. * . * It has long been my opinion that Canada will influence American poetry inversely as Scottish poetry influenced the poetry of England, that she will save America from her artistic licentiousness as truly as Scotlahd preserved her anclent con- querqrs from the '"'lambie sleep." The salvation can not come from within for the conservatives of the United States stand more aloof from the new movements in poesy than do the most conventional of English bards. Even Bridges is more than mildly interested in the frolics of Vachel Lindeay, and I know of no English poet who can be roused to fury as one can easily rouse a dozen American poets at the name of Edgar Lee Masters. To ignore vers libre is but to increase its vagaries; to sympathetically in- vade its mysteries and salvage all that is worthy is the attitude of the new school of Canadian poetry. . * i» The parallel holds good in every way. One school of American poetry has been declining in vigor and increasing in eccentricity for the bast decade, another has diminished its power at the whim of academic caprice and the destre for perfection, The Canadian poets have a sanity that is seldom found among the radicals of the United States; they also are possessed of a vigor of ui- terance and a wealth of thought that is #0 sadly lacking in the more con- servative American bards. One Am- erican poet receftly remarked that he could distinguish a Canadian Doet"s work by ite freshness and vigor. It is this quality that will strengthen the entire verse of Am- erica even as the blasphemy of formulae by Robert Burns once strengthened the verse of Great Bri- tain. Again the parallel holds good as Wwe observe the influence of American prose on Canadian prose. From "Chien d'Or 'to "Maria Chapde- laine" our effect on America in this particular fleld has been almost negligible. On the other hand, al- most every Canadian writer of prose has been influenced to his success or failure by that really notable con- tribution from Irving to Willa Ca- ther. Again the truth is apparent, as elsewhere, of the southern pre- dilection for prose and the morth- ern passion for poetry. * . . As smoke has a more devastating effect upon an American * Beauty rose than upon a wheat fleld, so does commercialism assail more potently the frail beauty of a lyrfc than it does those pages where rhyme and rhythm are absent. A country can be commercial to the core and pro- duce great novels, but the influence of the money changers is most damning to poetry. Even painting is more adversely affected by ma- terialism than is prose, and the transplanting of many a Canadian and American artist into a more thoughtful Europe has meant a new flowering of genius. But the Ameri- can novel has but increased in power with the advancing hum of machin- ery. In the most commercial of periods it rose from James Lane utterly! MOTHER = Fletcher's Cas- ~toria is a pleasant, harmless Substitute for Castor Oil, Pare- goric, Teething Drops and Soothing Syrups, prepared for Infants and Children all ages. Proven directions on each package. To avoid imitations, always look for the signature of Physicians everywhere recommend it Allen to Joseph Hergesheimer and Edith Wharton. Canadian poetry is vastly superior in quality to Canadian prose because the makers of verse in Canada are less concerned with the methods of alien poets than our novelists and essayists are concerned with the craftsmanship of foreign writers, All supreme craftsmanship is influenced by environment, and to accept the dictates of another atmosphere than the one in which you move means another apostasy to true art. When the Canadian novelists know this, the day of the real Canadian novel will arrive. Sir @Gilbert Parker, Mago de la Roche, Thomas Kirby and Louis Hemon are the mostin- digenous to our soil up to this date. But they are a small company in numbers when compared with the bards of a young land which has been ever rich with song, --WILSON MacDONALD, (To Be Continued.) ------------------ THE CAUSE OF SICKNESS Almost Always Due to Weak and Impoverished Blood. Apart from accident or illness due to infection, almost all {ill-health arises from one or two reasons, The mistake that people make is in not realizing that both of these have the same cause at the root, namely poor blood. Either bloodlessness or some other trouble of the nerves will be found 'to be the reason for almost every ailment. If you are pale, suf- fering from headaches, or breathless- ness, with palpitation of the heart, poor appetite and weak digestion, the cause is almost always poor blood. If you have nervous headaches, neural- gla, sciatica and other nerve pains, the cause is exhausted nerves. But run down nerves are also a result of poor blood, so that the two chief causes of illness are one and the same. If your health is poor; if you are pale, nervous or dyspeptic, you should give Dr. Williams' Pink Pills a fair trial. These pills act directly on the blood, and by enriching it give new strength to worn out nerves. Men and women alike greatly benefit through the use of this medicine. It you are weak or ailing, give Dr. Wil- Hams' Pink Pills a fair trial and you will be pleased with the beneficial re- sults that will speedily follow. If your dealer does not keep these pills you can get them by mail at 50 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont, a -- Briefs From Ardoch. Ardoch, July 24.--The recent rains have greatly aided the growth of vegetation. Congratulations to tiie Misses Nolla Weber and Margaret Scullton who were successful in pass- ing the entrance examinations, Miss Anne Fraser is in Sharbot Lake at- tending summer model school. Mrs, James Denne and children have re- turned from a visit with her parents. Mr. and Mrs. James Shultz, Harrow- smith. She also called at Kingston Hotel Dieu to visit Mrs. George 'Weber who stil remains a patient there. Herbert Hermer, Campbell- ford,, is spending a few days under the parental roof. The congregation of St. John's church welcomed their former esteemed pastor, Rev. P. Caiger Watson, who visited them during the week-end. James Madigan, Palmer Rapids, has been engaged by George Weber as a farm assistant. Master Robert Ryder, Kingston, is spending his vacation with his \ plain, Apert 7 po uncle, Robert Watkins, Mrs. Ferris, Toronto, arrived, after an absence of ° fourteen years, to take possession of her cottage mear Tymer's Bay. Miss Greta Schonauer has spent the past few weeks at Salmond's summer re- sont, Myers Cave. . DISTINCTIVE AIR This frock of beige flat crepe achieves an afr of distinction by its unique insert of' open-work em- broidery outlined with a row of ball buttons that attach by means of! loops. The dress itself, you will no« tice, is a perfectly straight tube affair with a Jenny neek 'and very | short sleeves. Detachable, bat part of the costume is the wide and very lengthy scarf of sélf-material edged with the ball buttons. It { worn over a slip of the same color. ------ Old legends tell of men who had the. power to look down Anto the earth and see where gold and silver lay hidden, GODKIN'S LIVERY For Bus and Taxi Service, ect Blend Sl

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy