Daily British Whig (1850), 3 Oct 1924, p. 10

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THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG NEWS AND VIEWS FOR WOMEN READERS Ithas 43%of Cream (78% Fat) | ~ NOTICE GALLAGHER'S wvice 960 SERVICE Complies strictly to the city tariff. For One Passenger ---- B0o For Two Passengers -. 50o For each additi'l person 28¢ Per Hour $2.50 fficien TOMORROW'S MENU Breakfast ! Apple Sauce Cereal Fried Eggs Toast Coffees Luncheon Baked Beans Catsup Wholewheat Bread Tea Lettuce Jelly Dinner Creamed Left-Over Cod Potatoes Steamed in Skins Brussels Sprouts Spiced Beet Salad Coffees Prune Whip Knitting A Boy's Sweater--Continued Note: The first half of these di- rections for an Bight-Year-Old Size »Boy's Slip-Over Sweater, appeared in this column yesterday. If you missed seeing it, buy a back copy of this newspaper. Do not write to me for a reprint, as I do not keep re- All Seven Passenger Sedans used. prints of my daily articles to send my, Regder Friends. The only way to get a back article which you have either missed or mislaid, is to 'bay a back copy, or to go to the circmla- tion room of this newspaper and fook over the recent files, then copy out any directions or recipes you want. Sleeve of Sweater: Holding out- side of 'garment toward you, pick up and knit 50 stitches around armhole, then work even till sleeve is four in- ches long. Narrow one stitch at each end of every sixth row, till 44 stitches remain. Work even till sleeve measures 12 inches long. Now change to the number three and one-half needles and make cuff "| as follows: K two, P two, for two and one-half inches, working laet row on outer surface of sleeve. * Change to Brown and K one row, K STRIKING OUTFIT. Florist Modding Bogus, Funeral De- 382 PRINCESS Soda is excellent for the water in which you are washing greasy dish. es but it should be avoided it the dishes have gilt on them becausa it has a tendency to eat it off gradu- ially. : Monkey fur is used lavishly in Paris, being smart to form border 'and collar and cuff effects, The fall dances have started a lot fot things, ; ¥ Only a real Parisienne could take equal parts of plain and striped ma- terial and envolve anything so Snappy as this sport outfit. The monogram on the very wide scarf Is most striking and makes a per. fect finish for the straightline coat. The dress beneath is a plain tube effect. Thanksgiving Services. Clarendon, Cept. 30.--Mre, Boles, St. Paul, Minn.,. and baby, Mabel, accompanied by Mrs. Vo! and son, Joseph, Point Ann, are are guests--of Mrs. Richard Burke, Dr. Wilson, Perth, is at Hotel Fron. tenac, Burke, motored to Perth and 'visited relatives .over the week end. The Harvest Thanksgiving ser- vices in St. 'Barnabas church "was well attended and the decorations In black or in a bright color. better if cooked uncovered, ee sss. : The most fashionable black felt hats are combined with velvet either Green vegetables keep their color two, P two, for one row. Work two rows in same way with the white angora wool, then with the yellow angora wool. Repeat from * until brown stripe has been worked four times, after it make two rows of white and bind off. Collar: This is caMed a turtle collar because it rolls back from under the chin in a deep, fold. Holding outer surface sweater toward you, with white wool pick up 76 sts. around neck, using be picked up on three needles, 24 stitches each on two needles, and 28 sts. on the third needle. With white K two, P two, for one inch, then with Brown K two, P two, for two rounds, then with white agaln, for two more rounds. Turn sweater inside' out, knitting rounds of re- mainder of collar in opposite diree- tion. * With the yellow wool, K one round, then K two, P two, for one round. Repeat last two rounds with brown, then with white. Repeat from * A111 brown stripe has been worked six times, then continue with the -white alone til] collar is five and one-half inches deep. Bind off loosely, to allow collar o slip over head easily. Sew up seams, then brush Sweater with a soft brush. Tomorrow--Recipes Fromy Read- ers. the . ! All mquiries addressed to Nlss Kirkman in care of the "@fticient Housekeeping" department will he answered in these columns in thelr tarn. This requires ccnsiderable time, however, owing to the great aumber recvived. So if a personal or quicker reply is desired, a stamp- #d and ssif-addressed envelope must be enclosed with the Question. Be sure to uss YOUR ful! name, street pumber, and the names of your city and state. ~--The Edito.. A TRIBUTE. IS "PAID 10 A COUNTRY PASTGR! |The Late Rev. Joseph Gandler | of Newburgh Was a Faith , ful Servant. Presbyterian Witness Joseph Gandier 'was born in Kent, County, Bugland. ; His father, a school teacher and the very image of Archbishop Temple, was sent out to Canada as a inlssionery to care for the pioneer English setttlers in" Hast- ings County. Beginning in, the dis- trict about Belleville, he moved lat- | er into Rawdon township and bach along the terrible *Hasting Road" to L'Amable, Maynooth and all the rough hinterland of Hastings and Peterboro counties. Sharing to the | tunl the poverty and hardships of the pioneers in a rough country, he continued to the end of life an un- failing testimony to "the truth as it is in Jesus." Joseph Gandier, who as the eldest son early shared in the missionary | labors of the father, married Helen Bastwood, also a native of Kent county, Emngland,. and .the young' couple began life together on a backwoods farm, But the call to the Christian ministry was upon the young farmer, and ere long the farm | was given up, and he had begun a | course of study at Queen's Univer- { 8ity. Only those who have passed j through the experience know what i it means to rear and support a grow- ling famtly while the father pursues a college course. But the brave {and resourceful wife and mother | made it possible, and he was ordain- {ed minister of Fort Coulonge, Que- bec, in November, 1874. Dr. D. M. | Gordon, the honéred principal emer- j tus of Queen's, who was then a | Very young man, just beginning his ministry at St. Andrew's, Ottawa, | Was present, and took part in the f ordination service. i Fort Coulonge was at that time | the last Protestant congregation on , the north side of the Ottawa River, jand for a distance of thirty mites along the river and as far back into Farm | ! -Mre. Appleby and Miss May : 1 : CILLETTS LYE warm | of | number three and one-half double- | pointed needles. The stitches should ( Domin A . wi | "Reduced Prices The best | ] what you'll say if wonderful new Dominion greatly reduced prices. that needs covering, choose a Dominion Linoleum Rug. You can't go on either quality or price. All Furnishin at floor H and save Save tear. Their firm to ouse General Stores bargain of the season! That's "when you see these inoleum Rugs For every g Departmental and have money. - Housework Too them. Buy now Economy is only one feature of genuine Lino- leum Rugs. They wear and wear and cannot They save endless tiresome housework as well. No scrubbi irm, smooth s Dust and dirt cannot penetrate it. Light. mop- Ph TT or heavy sweeping. ace is moisture-proof. is the only effort needed i is bright and fresh as new. ion Li Now in Effect noleum 4 Buy early. Then you'll be sure of At all House Furnishing, PPS and the woods as any pioneer had sett- led or any lumberjack felled timber, he was the only Protestant mission- ary. Faithfully he discharged his duties, hunting out all the scatter- ed families in that wide territory and holding services from time to time in every settlement. In the winter season he made long trips with hors- es and sleigh, penetrating sometimes 150 miles into the unbroken for- est over frozen lakes and 'timber roads, to visit isolated groups of lumbermen in the "shanties" at the head waters of the Coulonge and Black rivers. Never a robust. man, it -was marvellous how he endured the exposures and hardships. It Paul could say "A night and a day was I in the deep," he could say, "A night and a day was I lost in a storm on a frozen lake,"when the awful cold was below the zero Point and the trackless snow several feet deep. But he had his reward in the re- gard and affection of all gorts and conditions of men, and was equally loved by Roman' Catholics and Pro- testants. : After nineteen years of such sér- vice he was called to lighter duties in the congregation of Newburgh, and Camden East, Kingston Presby- tery, where he and M -Gandier continued their ministry for anoth. er nineteen years, exerting a quiet and gracious Influence on the whole community until their name was as ointment poured forth. Mrs. Gand- fer was a woman of great natural i endowment. Her depth of religious i feeling was only equalled by her | strength of character, wide sympath- | es and penetrating intellect, which j went straight to the heart of any | problem. The mother of ten child- Ten, who all grew to manhood and | womanhood, and have made for themselves places of honor and use- fulnees in the Church and in #0¢-. lety, sie not omly made ends meet on the minimum stipend, but found THE STORE THAT SETS THE PACE JOSEPH ABRAMSKY & SONS Largest assortment of Dominion Linoleum Rugs in the City. time for all the duties of a minister's wife. The centre of a beautiful fam- ily life, without wealth and without ostentation, she made .her home a place of almost ideal hospitality, as many can witness who at one time or another came within the charmed circle. The ten years from seventy to eighty were perhaps the happiést of their lives for these faithful servants of Christ. They were now relieved in great measure from congregation- al responsibility, enjoyed §00d health had their home in one of the beauty spots of Ontario, with a garden in which they loved to work and the flowers gnd trees in which they most delighted all about them. Such ripeness of Christian character, such gratitude to God, such honor and affection from a wide circle of friends, such devotion from their family, few even of God's choicest servants have been privileged to en- joy. The arduous toil of mission fleld and rural ch , with a sti. pend never reaching' 1,000, may not seem very enticing to the average young couple, but Mr. and Mrs. Gandier proved that it has the pos- sibility of rewards no fortune can 'buy and no earthly crown can give, Mrs. Gandier passed aftes a briet illness last year, and Mr. Gandier, after several years of falling strength, quietly fell on sleep August 17¢h this past summer. The members of the family are: Principal Gandier, of Knox College; Lady Falconer, of Toronto; Dr. George G. Gandler, of Dartmouth, Nova Scotia; Dr. J. C. Gandier, of Clinton; Mr. Ernest Gander, of Newburgh; Mrs. James Thomson, of Napanee: Miss Anna and Miss Lil- lith, of Newburgh. Two sons died a few years ago in the maturity of thelr manhood--Dr. Augustine Gan- dier, a young surgeon of Sherbrooke, Quebec. and Dr. D. MacGillivray Geudier, general superintendent of f the Anti-Saloon League, California, who led the forces that' wom the battle for prohibition in that great State. > -------- "JOHN WESLEY." Consecon, Oct. 1.--The Institute met fn the church vestry, on Tues. day afternoon, and quite a number of ladies were present. On Sunday evening, Rev. Mr. Wolfraim contin- ued his series of biographical sub- jects. The one last taken was John Wesley and a very interesting and h profitable discourse wag given, | Miss C. Fox returned 'from Picton, on Friday evening, after visiting a couple of days at Miss Orilla Smith's, and aleo at Mrs. J. Fox's. Mrs. Eber . Weeks and daughter, Mary, were fair visitors at Ploton, on Friday, Harold Giles has left for his home at Enterprise. Among reéent callers at C. G. Fox's were Mr. and Mrs. R. Blake- ly and J. R. Prench. R. Young is suffering an attack of rheumatism. Mr. Tripp is convalescing, H, Mur- Phy is adding to his list of boar ers. Sorry to 'report the recent' RED BLOOD MAK OUR STRENG ves every his pea ALL wis death of Mr. Kiset of the village. ? Red ES vibrant I if il $F

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