Daily British Whig (1850), 6 Sep 1924, p. 9

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i THE D Sunday Services in Churches Salvation Army----Sunday services,, First Baptist Church, Sydenham 7 a.m., 11 am.; 3 p.m., City Park; and Johnson streets--Rev. J. 8. La 7 p.m., Salvation meeting. - Sunday | Flair, pastor. 11 am sermon school, 10.15 a.m. and 2 pm. En-/ theme, "Bread from Heaven," a sign and Mrs. Bosher in charge. communion meditation. The Ordi- ne | nanee of the Lord's Supper will fol- St. Andrew's Presbyterian--Rev. | low the morning service. 2.45 p.m., John W. Stephen, minister. Public Bible school; 7 p.m., sermon theme, worship, 11. am. and 7 p.m. con-| "The Offending Christ." Services ducted by the minister. strangers conducted by the pastor. cordially invited, Sunday school, 3 p.m. St. James' Church, Corner Barrie "Phone 316 Baggies and Saddle Horses CATARAQUI CEMETERY Saturday except Monday and High class Pictures and Frames now at Bargain Prices. Photo Studio Now Open, S. Gartland _ 387 PRINCESS STREET Door Above Harrison's tS) oyes and nose, stuffing up of the ------- and Arch streets.--T. W. Savary, W.C.T.U~The meeting | rector, the rectory, 156 Barrie {of the Women's Christian Temper-istreet. 11 am. holy communion !ance Union will be held in the Y.!and sermon.- Sermon subject, ""'Con- W.C.A, parlors, Johnson street, on|firmation Scriptural and Historical." Tuesday, Sept. 9th, at 3.30 p.m. All!3 p.m., Sunday school; 7 p.m., even- ladles. welcome. ! ing prayer and sermon. Sermon sub- el | ject, "3rd Psaldn--The Honored Hall, Orange Hall, Princess Guest." : street--Lord's supper, 11 a.m.;| -- young peopie's meeting, 3 p.m.; St. George's Cathedral--Very Rev. Gospel meeting, 7 p.m.; Evangelist G. Lothrop Starr, M.A., D.D., dean George Garratt, of Foxmeade, Ont.,! and rector; Rev. W. E. Kidd, M.A., will be the speaker. Ernest Thomas | M.C., curate. Twelfth Sunday after will have charge of the singing. | Trinity. 8" a.m., holy communion; ee {11 a.m. holy communion. Preacher, Chalmers Church, corner Earl and | the dean. 3 p.m., Sunday school; Barrie streets--Minister Emeritus,|4 p.m., holy baptism; 7 p.m., even- Very Rev. Malcom MacGillivray, D. song. Preacher, Rev. W. E. Kidd. D. Minister, Rev. Geo. A. Brown, M. | A., B.D. Services, 11 am. and T| p.m., conducted by the minister, 3 p.m,, Sunday school Cooke's Church, Brock Street Rev. T. J. 8S. Ferguson, B.A., minis- ter. 11 a.m. "Removing the Sins of | the World." 3 p.m., Sunday School | Bethel Congregational Charch, | and Bible Classes. 7 p.m., "Come Un- | corner Barrie and Johnson streets-- |to Me All Ye That Labour." At the] Services, 11 a.m., and 7 p.m. Rev. morning hour of worship, a kinder-| J. A. Miller will preach at both ser-! garten schookis held in which parents vices. Sunday school, 3 p.m., Chris- | may place their children. Everybody tian Endeavor Society, Monday, 8! welcome. p.m. Sacrament will be served at! the morning service. : Queen Street Methodist Church.-- W. H. Raney, B.A., B.D. minister, | 30 Colborne street. 11 a.m., public Sydenham Street--R. H. Bell, Subject of sermon: '"Sen- minister, Public worship and ser- worship. mon, 11 a.m, and 7 pm. Morning sation or Sacrifice? Which?" St. subject: "Making the Most of What Luke IV, 9; St. Matthew XXVII, | We Have." Let us have a full rally| 40; 3 p.m., Sunday school; '7 p.m. of the congregation. Sunday school! public worship. Sermoz 'The and Bible classes, 2.45 p.m.; offi-| Christian Compared, with the Greek cial board, Monday, 8 p.m, Athlete. Temperance, the condition --- of fitness, I Cor. IX, 25. What is| St. Luke's Church, Nelson Street.| Temperance? Is it "Moderation in| Rev, J. dePencier Wright, M.A, B.|an things?" Is it.pot rather moder-| D., rector. Twelfth Sunday after ation in things helpful and abstin-| Trinity. 11 a.m., morning prayer | ence from things harmful? and holy communion; -2.50 p.m.,| Sunday school and Bible classes; 4| Christian Science, First Church of | p.m., holy baptism; 7 p.m., evening Christ, Scientist, 95 Johnson prayer. Seats free, Strangers and street--Service, 11 a.m. Subject, visitors cordially welcome to all ser-| "Man." Wednesday, 8 p.m., testimo- | vices. {nial meeting including testimo-| | niles 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 day school; 7 p.m. "Opportunity." holidays, from 8 to 5 p.m. The minister at both services. A!All are cordially invited hearty welcome and helpful mes-|the services and to make use of the sage. | reading room. . Calvary Congregational Church-- (The Friendly Church), cormer of Bagot and Charles streets. Rev. | Frank Sanders, minister. 11 am.,| "Personal Providence." 3 p.m., Sun- : ounce bottles, this gives you as near as you can come without actual mea- surement to the Jiount in the blood. Snuff two teaspoonfuls up each nostril two or three times, a day. This is cheap treatment and within the reach of everybody, in place of using drugs, sprays or get- ting medical treatment. Try it. It will do no harm, Ask your family physician about it. +s =--W. A, McCCARTHY, M.D. EFFICIENCY IMPAIRED Why Many Men and Women Are Badly Handicapped. When you are so run down in health that it impairs the efficiency of your work as well as your power to enjoy your leisure hours, or obtain rest, it is time , you looked to the cause, If you do not, a serious breakdown is almost sure to result sooner or later. In nearly all cases this condition, which doctors usually describe.as general debility, is due to poor blood---blood that is deficient in LETTERS To The Editor Cuting Hay Fever. Kingston, Sept. 5.--(To the Edi- tor): Having been stopped on the strédet yesterday and being told by a lady that a very simple treatment I sald to use had benefitted her very much, so seeing many on the streets sneezing and using their -handker- chiefs, I thought it well to give it to the public with explanation. The inside of the nose, like the outside, is composed of bone. It is separated into:two parts by a wall called septum. The two openings called in olden times nose holes, now called nostrils in which are situated thfee turbinated bomes, these are to warm the air, catch particles of dust and other substances before go- ing down to the lungs. All the lining of the whole breath- ing tract is covered with a very deli- to |, AILY BRITISH WHIG ~ THE WHITE COLLAR BRIGADE (Continued from Page 1.) One could sympathise with the feelings of this youth. His father, possessing high academic standing, was scientific reader for a publishing house at the magnificent sum of one hundred and twenty-five dollars a month. With a touch of bitterness in his voice, the father remarked: "What's the good of bothering about a B.A. degree in a world where elbow-grease takes precedence to mental effort ?" SOMETHING WRONG, One of the leading college presidents of the United States tells me of an illiterate who applied for the position as janitor of School A, in New York City. The salary for this position seemed attractive, and the applicant was consequently keen on getting the job. Ne "Can you read I was the first query. "No." "Well, you won't do." : "Why, what has reading got to do with shaking down furnaces ?" demanded the applicant. But his refusal was final. Later ,the man who could not land the enviable position shaking down furnaces, branched out on his own in shipyard contracts during the War. With the emergency, there came a boom in American shipping, so that the illiterate contractor made a clean-up. One day he was in the bank negotiating some business when the manager asked him to sign his name. "I can't write," was his confession. On looking up his account the manager found that he had over three hundred thousand dollars to his credit. "How in the world did you ever make that amount of money ?" "By contract work in the ship yards." "And yet you mean to tell me that you haven't even the rudiments | of an education ?" "No." : ~ "My, but what wouldn't you have been if you had only known how to read!" "I'd 'ave been janitor of School A in New York City." TRUE VALUES. A traveller through this dominion cannot but be impressed by the fantastic sense of values that actuate this country. In the land that boasts of the rule of the majority, noisy and truculent minorities are forever extorting the lion's share of the reward. A belligerent bricklayer "gets his" by sheer assault, while the execel- lent old gentleman in the black alpaca coat remains in the cubicle of an office, unrecognized and unrequited. Alas, it is too often the case that those who "raise the biggest holler" get the biggest reward. With so much being said and written about the poor down-trodden Janitors and stevadores, it is surely about time that soméone raised a wee peep on behalf of the faithful army of clerks and' professional men in humbler places, who go hoof-slogging home at night while the over. alled gentry roll by in their tin lzzies. . The tendency more and more in this age seems to be to put a premium on brawn, and a discount on brain. The comparison set forth in the ad for a janitor and a teacher is an adumbration of how mere manual labor is tending to usurp that primacy which in another age belonged to the aristocracy of intellectual toilers. MILIAON DOLLAR PLUG-UGLY, It is a fantastic sense of values that brackets a movie manniken, or a pugilistic plub-ugly, for the same proportionate recompense as a railroad president or a great industrial' executive. I have often heard carttail spell-binders complaining about the large salary of the chief at the head of the works, but I never heard them complain about the large income of a Mr, Firpo or a Mr. Dempsey. In the autumn time our schools and colleges are re-opening. to eager hosts of boys and, girls. The faithful teachers and professors that are entrusted with the moulding and guiding of this young life have perhaps the most important job in Canada to-day, and yet a regiment of the same could be hired for the yearly income of a certain plub-ugly from the. prize ring ! If these present standards are right and true, there is more value in the hind leg of a Jack.ass than there is in the brain of man. A world that rewards Charles Chaplin's feet with millions, and Charles Saunders' discovery of Marquis Wheat with a pittance may well cause questioning. But in these very questionings there is a challenge to the white collar brigade, that in the days to come they also assert their rights and as a class obtain for themselves a more equable compensation. Such an agita- tion should command the Sympathy of all those who think, since it would be a striving to regain the lost primacy of brain sweat over brawn sweat. THE TOWN WATCHMAN The Kingston exhibition, if it had Corns Drop Out In Hot Water It's very easy to take out a sore corn by the '"'Putnam's" method. Take a special foot bath which is de- scribed in the directions. Apply a few drops of Putnam's Corn Extractor, _ British Columbia Fir Doors 'are becom- ing very popular. The two-panel is a hand- some door, made with e Grain Solid Stiles and three ply Rotary Cut Panels. We carry a good assortment of stock sizes for prompt delivery. ALLAN LUMBER CO. Victoria Street. 'Phone 1042. A RESTAURANT THAT WILL PLEASE YOU Drop in and have your meals with us. ' We have everything you could desire at reasonsble prices. CROWN. CAFE Open from 7.30 am. to © am. 4 " 208 PRINCESS STREET " TELEPHONE 1398. \ ~ Dominion Textile Company Limited bit hs "PURE COTTON" .MONTREAL--TORONTO--WINNIPEG "Good News" It is free. Call to-day. i Many grown people have defective sight because their eyes were neglects ed in childhood. We advise all parents to give sere fous thought to the condition of their children's eyes. Are you a parent? If so, ach quickly, . J. M. PATRICK 140 Sydesham Street, Kingston CADILLAC Two Electric i} when we take a drink we do, too. cate lining of mucus membrane sup- plied with very sensitive nerves. The dust from the roads, the pol- len from plants as hay, flowers, smoke from factories, from automo- biles, etc., irritate this , membrane, causing sneezing, running at the head, coughing, ete. This may possibly lead to chi nie catarrh, laryngitis, or throat trouble, bronchitis or asthma. A means of preventing or helping this condition is simple. You know that we' frequently wash our bodies; every day we wash our mouth, and teeth, if not by a brush, with mouth washes, yet it that nose is never washed out. Some may do it, some when they go swimming may accidently and some never since the day they were born. THe simple remedy is: Take a 'teaspoonful of ordinary table salt to two tups of water or in a sixteen red corpuscles. When the blood is thin and weak your whole system suffers. You lose appetite, have no energy, your nerves trouble you and you feel restless. i 'What you need is help to bulld up your blood and you should begin at once to make your blood rich and red by taking Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. You will soon notice the difference in your health by a better appetite and in vigor. The reason is that the new blood created by Dr. Wil- liams' Pink Pills stimulates all the or- gans of the body to healthy activity, and so the system gains nourishment and strength. If you are weak or out of sorts begin gaining new strength to-day by taking Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. 2 You can get these pills from your druggist or by mail at 50 cents a box trom The Dr. Willlams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. no other attraction than the pageant depicting the history of the Lime- stone City, should draw big crowds. When Kingston's 250th anniversary took place a little over a yéar ago a sickly effort made to hold a celebra- tion in honor of that auspicious event, but the local historical society and the city council were not big efiotigh to carry it on. Now we are to view a pageant at the fair grounds within a forthight. Let the efforts of those responsible for it be ap- preciated. When no other cause can be dis- 'éovered, it is usual to lay the blame for a fire on "defective electric wir- ing." It appears likewise to be the custom just now when there is busi- ness depression and unemployment to lay the blame on the tariff. Peo- ple should talk sense and realize that all countries are getting hit. Funny, isn't it, that the high tariff of the Draited States 1s not relished by Cane and out comes the corn--roots and all. There is no pain, not even sore- ness; the thick tissue is softened, and healing 'Putnam's" goes to the-heart of the corn. Success guaranteed. 25¢. at all dealers. There are the cases of three men who were nearly kicked to death by ruf- fians near Morton; two persons on farms injured (ome (fatally) by horses, and a boy out at Violet who had both wrists fractured 'while load- ing hay. , ow So long as Kingston and many other folks insist upon riding through the country in automobiles instead of in passenger coaches, so long will there be fewer locomotives for the Kingston works to build. Have you ever tried to figure out how many additional locomotives 'would be needed by the railway ~ | companies if there was fifty per cent. less travel between cities and towns the hospitals with mater-|BY | must be admitted that farm is becoming more hazardous. al "Belleville seems fo thrive on its Eee Ex jist Phose 819, sundry that he is on vacation and thaf a vacation to him means absence from all public duties. f If people imagine that the Prince of Wales has an easy job, they have another "think coming." This young man is performing . most onerous duties of a social, diplomatic and in- | ternational nature, and his person-| | ality is a tremendous asset to the Specials Electric Curling ongs Special $1.75. Electric Irons Britfsh Bmpire. So let His Royal Highness have a quiet holiday. Let him dance all he wishes, for is as good exercise as golf or rowing. all i i ERE ji teks g i : ii

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