Daily British Whig (1850), 15 Nov 1924, p. 12

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SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1924 THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG THE SPARK PLUG &"Vitamins to nourishment are what a spark-plug is to a motor. To sustain vitality, | the body needs three thou- sand calories of food daily, if this food is not activated vitamins the body is un- a thrive in health or Soot s Emulsion :: brings to a weakened system vitsmigractivated ous | ment of highest d A | little taken r helps wonderfully to build strength | and resistance. If you would keep strong and Yala tivate diet with Scott's Emulsion. Scott & Bowne, Toronto, Ont. wu BRITISH AMERICAN) HOTEL in Public Service Since 1784 M. BOHAN. PROPRIETOR, KINGSTON. OR Th AA CL HAL DOMINION EX GET IT REPAIRED Sewing Machines, hoses: uns, Rifles J. M. PATRICK 149 Sydenham Street, Kingston Phone 2080J. | mnesday, 8 p.m. | praise service. by Lieut. | Belleville. | school and Bible \ Sunday Services in Churches . Paul's--Holy Commanion, 11 { subject: a.m. at Archdeacon Dobbs. Sunday school, 3 p.m.; prayer, 7 p.m. Preacher, Bishop of the Diocese. Pentecostal Tabernacle, Queen | treet--11 am. and 7.30 p.m. Spec- fal revival services. James Lebrocq | in charge. Come early to get a seat. Sou stirling Messages in store for . Gospel Hall, Orange Hall, Prin cess street--Lord's Supper, 11 a.m.; Sunday school and Bible class, 3 | pam.; Gospel service, 7 pm. Mr. A. E. Thomas will have charge of the | singing, St. Andrew's Presbyteriaff--Rev. : John W. Stephen, 'minister. Public worship, 11 a.m. and 7 p.m., con- ducted by the minister. Students, soldiers and strangers cordially in- vited. Sunday sohool and Bible k 3 pm. a ~ Princess street Methodist church ~--Rev. John K. Curtis, B.A., minis- ter. 11 a.m., Prof. 8. F. Maine, of Albert College, Belleville, will preach. 2.45 p.m. Bible school; "7 pam., the pastor will preach on "Mixed Marriages," by request. Seats free and a cordial welcome. Bethel Congregational Church, corner Barrie and Johnson streets-- Rev. J. Alex. Miller, minister, 92 Clergy street W. Services, 11 a.m. 'Thanksgiving Service." 7 p.m. "Desire and Duty." Sunday school, 8 p.m., Christian Endeavor Soclety, | Monday, 8 p.m. Prayer service, Wed- -- Salvation Army Citadel, Princéss | Street--7 a.m., prayer meeting; 11 holiness meeting; 3 p.m. 7 pm. Salvation meeting; Sunday school, 10 a.m. and 2 p.m., services conducted by Ensign and Mrs. Bosher, assisted Ritchie. Everybody cord- fally invited. am., Sydenham Street--R. H. Bell, minister. 11 a.m., public' worship and sermon by the minister. 7 p.m., Rev. 8. F. Maine, B.D., professor of religious education, Albert College, 2.45 p.m, Sunday classes. Usual sing-song and social hour. Come and join us. -- St. James' Church, corner Union { and Barrie streets--T. W. BSavary, rector, the rectory, 156 Barrie street. 11 a.m., morning prayer and holy communion. Sermon subject, "The Way to Spiritual Knowledge." 8 pn. Sunday school; 7 p.m. eve- ming prayer and eermon. Sermon High class Pictures and Frames now at Bargain Prices. Photo Stadio Now Open. S. M. Gartland 237 PRINCESS STREET One Door Above Harrison's | Peter, have been subject, M.A., M.C., curate. Sunday after Trinity. 8 a.m., holy "God's Condemmed." St. George's Oathedral -- Very Rev. G. Lothrop Starr, M.A, D.D,, dean and rector; Rev. W. E. Kidd, Twenty-second communion; 11 a.m., holy commun- fon. Preacher, the Bishop of the Diocese... 3 p.m., Sunday schools; 4 p.m., holy baptism; 7 p.m., even- song. Preacher, The Dean. Calvary onal Church (The Friendly Church), corner of Bagot and Charles streets. Rev. Frank Sanders, minister. 11 a.m, evening { ject: | evening, 8 o'clock. come and helpful message. 7 p.m., sub- Love." Young every Monday | A hearty wel- | p.m, Sunday school. '"The Gift of People's Society First Baptist Church, Sydenham and Johnson streets--Rev. J. B. La- Flair, pastor. 11 a.m. sermon theme, "What Is Man?" 2.45 p.m. Bible school; 7 p.m. sermon theme, | "All Ashore." Special musical nuin- | bers at this service. The ordinance of the Lord's supper wilf be ob-| served at the close of the evening | service. A picture-story service for | the children at 11.30 each Sunday! mornirg. St. Luke's Church, Nelson Street | Rev, J. dePencier Wright, M.A. B.D., rector. Twenty-second Sunday | after Trinity. 8 a.m., holy com | munion; 11 a.m, 2.30 p.m., Sunday school and Bible | 7 4 p.m., holy baptism; p.m., evening prayer. Music--An- them, "Let God Arise" (Simper),| Mr. H. Birchall and choir. Seats | free. Students, strangers and visi- | tors cordially welcome, classes; Queen . Street Methodist Church | --Minister, W. H. Raney, B.A, B.D, 30 Colborne street. 11 a.m., public worship. Theme: "The Nature of True Worship." Mr. D. La France, violinist, will assist the choir. 8] p.m., Sunday school. Prof. Main, of | Albert College, Belleville, will give | a brief address. 7 p.m. public wor-| ship. Sermon on "The Ommipres- ence." Mrs. W. Van Luven will sing. Students and visitors welcome. -- Chalmers Church, corner Earl and Barrie streete-- Minister Emeritus, Very Rev. Malcolm Macgillivray, D. D. Minister, Rev. Geo. A. Brown, M, A., B.D.--Public worship at 11 a.m., the minister. 'Riches of His Grace." 7 p.nm., the minister. "The Christian Character." 2 p.m., Stu- dents' Bible class. 3 p.m. Sunday school and Bible class. Strangers and students cordially welcomed. Mrs. Herbert Wood of Vancouver will sing at the morning service. -- Ohristian Science, First Church of Christ, Scientist, 96 Johnson street ~--S8ervice 11 a.m. and 7 p.m. Subject "Mortals and Immortals." Wed- nesday, 8 p.m., testimonial meeting including testimonies 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 ex- cept Sundays and holidays, from 8 to 5 p.m. All are cordially invited to the services and to make use of the reading room, Cooke's church, Brock street Worship, 11 am. and 7 pm. An- niversary services. Preacher, Rev. W. A. Mcllroy, B.A., Hamilton. Spec- ial music. A.M. anthem, "Father of Mercies;" duet, "I Waited for the Lord," Mrs. Treneer, Miss K. Eas- son. P.M., organ recital, 6.30; an- them, "Praise the Lord;" solo, "With All Your Hearts," Mr. Lem- mon; duet, "O Loving Saviour," Mrs. Treneer, Mr. Anderson; male quar- tette, "My Jesus as Thou WIIt," Messrs. Lemmon, Newman, Donnelly and Filson. Everybody welcome. * Peter's Confession | By Wm. BE. Gilroy, D.D., Editor-in- jef of The Congregationaliet. K. Chesterton, the well-known English journalist, has called attention to the fact that when Jesus would es- tablish His church on earth He chose as the rock upon which to build it neither the sublime Lion, nor the guile- less Nathanael, but a man full of hu- man weakness like Peter, whom Mr. Chesterton characterizes as a "snob." Peter was something of a "snob," though he was probably not conscious of it. His impetuousness and self- confidence made him think of himself as just a little more dependable than the rest of the disciples. Did he not say to Jesus, "Though all my men deny Thee, yet will not 1?" His relig- jous prejudices, also, were so intense that he had to have a vision on the housetop before he would receive a Gentile upon common ground. : The Gospel story, both in the New Testament, and in the records of the triumph, of the Gospel in the Church, |. is the story of how weak men, and proud men, and ambitious men, like transformed into courageous, saintly men, "God has chosen for the out 'of His purposes. ing of Peter's radlln] his meeting with Jesus. not understand Jesus, but Peter humble, whom Jesus. He found in Him all that was divine and glorious. It is this heartfelt confession that constitutes the trhe recognition of Jesus. He cares little for the acknow- ledgment that is only from the lips. He reproachéd those of His day for calling Him, "Lord, Lord," while they failed to do the things that He said. Is Jesus different today? Does He demand from us any less real a confes- sion and surrender of our lives? Is Jesus really divine to us? Do we yield to Him our lives and services as to the Lord of the realm of Love and Truth? "Thou art the Christ, the Son of the living God." What is the proof of this confession? It is Jesus himself. He de- mands nothing from the soul that does not wholly enrich and purify our lives. We could conceive of no acknowledg- ment. that would lift the soul to higher goodness than this sincere surrender of the soul to Christ. The highest place Dat heaven affords Is to our Jesus gi The King of Kings ee Lord of Lords He rules o'er earth and heaven. It is in Jesus of Nazareth that God and man meet. er had discovered this. Perhaps Peter did not understand all the tress bf the confession that e, but at any rate it meant all "Fellowship With God." 3 morning prayer; | [BOOKS LA ROUX { By Johnston Abbott. Toronto, $2. The publishers inform us that the { author who masks his personality | under the pen-name of Johnston Ab- ibott is 4 man "whose name is a Macmillan, | household' word in big business and | | tinance in Canada from coast | coast." From internal evidence we add the conjecture that he is a law- | yer; whence it would appear that he must be '& corporation lawyer. More to the point is the fact that he is evidently a man of culture and sengibiiity, with a smooth and { rather classical English style and a | discerning eye for the atmosphere | of the St. Lawrence. "La Roux" is | a love-story of the adventures of a | young aristocratic Frenchwoman and a forty-year-old aristocratic | Frenchman in Freme¢h Canada in {the time of Maisonneuve; the Frenchman is disguised as a habit- | ant. It would be foolish te expect the slightest novelty of plot In a tale of this category, and we do not get any. The only respect in which "La Roux" differs from its pre- | decessors is that the persistence of | the hero in sticking te his disguise is, it possible, even less reagonable ! than 'usual, and the idiocy of those around him in not penetrating it is | even more glaring. But it is pene- | trated at last, and hero and heroine end in each other's arms. Their ad- ventures prior to this climax are exciting enough, but what we like about the book is that it is obvious- ly written by a man, and by a man not consciously writing for women readers, and hence has a pleasantly manly air about it. Also it ds writ- ten by an educated man, not con- sciously writing for uneducated readers, and hence it has a liter- ary flavor. As Maisonneuve books go, this is a very good Maisonneuve book. : ELSIE AND THE CHILD. By Arnold Bennett, McClelland & Stewart, Toronto, $2.50. Mr. Bennett has acquired such a ekill in the development of his minor characters that even when all the chief personages of a novel have perished he can go on writing tales about the survivors of the that fascinating study of miserliness entitled "Riceyman Steps," ended with a very general mortality; but a serving-inind and her shell-shock- od husband survived, and by placing these in the household of the doctor who attended the "Steps" deathbeds Mr. Bennett gets a perfectly good new story, a very good one indeed, which ocouples 72 pages of this génerous 344-page volume of short and moderately-short stories, and gives it its title, It is a very import ant and subtle study of a domestic interior, exhibiting the tremendous forces exerted by a young girl of twelve years upon both of her par- ents, their domestics and their friends. There are a dozen other tales, all interesting (it seems im- possible go Mr. Bennett not to be interesting) and some very iliumin- ating. The best collection of short stories this season. SARD HARKER. By John Masefield. Macmillan, To- ronto, $2.00. This is 8 remarkable epitome of Mr. Masefield's virtues and vices as an author. For more than two-thirds of the book, so long, that is, as ils plot continues to be a mystery, it is a masterpiece of indescribable beauty. If it had been published in four instalments, corresponding to its present division into four parts, and a reader should happen to die before' the fourth instalment appeared, he would, if a person of good judgment, die in sthe perfect to! same group of people. His last novel] | confidence that he had read part of the greatest heroic tals since "Treasure Island." The fourth in- stalment reveals the fact that the vast and mysterious forces which | have been operating obscurely and | very imposingly in the first three i parts are merely the kind of thing! i that is much Detter invented by | scores of very ordinary mystery- novelists, and that Mr. Masetield has been working us up to a, terrific pitch about an unimpressive and unconvincing devil-worship society. The annoying part of it is that we | feel that Mr. Masefield could have | finished off as intensely as he be- gan, and that the only reason why he did not do so is that he lost in- terest in his job. 'Plots do not inter- est him; atmosphere and character do. The same criticism could be passed on "The Tragedy of Naan" and many other of his works; but it has never been quite sn evident. But the beginning of "Sard Harker" is beyond description exquisite. We are hurled into the very middle of the intense sun and shade, the in- tense loves and fidelities and hates and revenges, the - intense luxury and the intense peril, of Latin Central America, and it js drawn for us with the pencil of a perfect artist in descriptive language. Some of Mr. Masefield's recent output has been mere sketches for possible poems, but this prose work (lit up with verse passages, it is true, which get thinner as the poet's keeness for his job dies down) Is finished, so far as writing is con- cerned, up to the last rub of polish. A 'thing to read and ba thankful for, LEAVES FROM THE GOLDEN BOUGH. Called by Lady Fraser; with draw. ings by H. M. Brock. Mac- millan, Toronto, $8. "The Golden Bough," that mar- velous collection of folk-lore and folk practices by Sir James G. Fraz- er, is continually adding to the number of its adherents. In its orig- inal form it consists of twelve vol- umes; it has recently been published in an abridged but extremely val- uable form in one volume at about five dollars; and now we have an | anthology from it compiled by the author's wife, with. appropriate fairy-tale illustrations, as a gift book whereby new candidates, es- pecially among the young, may be enlisted for the Bough's worship. "The Golden Bough" was always in- tended by destiny, though perhaps not by its author, as a thing to browse upon rather than to con- sume systematically. For ourselves we prefer to do our browsing In the twelve-volume edition In some lib- rary, though we should like to have the abridged edition to permit of our browsing at home. But some prefer to have their picking done for them, and these will find the present book a very useful ome. it is not, we presume, necessary to dwell on the fact that in Fraser's work folk-lore is not merely a col- lection of superstitions but is an entralling! interesting exhibition of the man not merely of primitive man but of man very like ourselves. This is an admirable gift-book for persons in the early stages of an interest in anthropology. ey oh JR Sin I SINS KIDNEY Kingston Markets Friday, Nov. 14. Fruit, d0B.. «vie. d0 tO 40 Grapes, Cal, Ib .. «4 ++ ..35 Grapes, local, basket .. ..48 to 56 Oranges, d0Z.. .. .. «+ «+35 to 60 Lemons, dos. canned Apricots, Cal, Ib «18 Prunes, Cal, Ib. ........15 to 80 Peaches, Evap., Ib... .. .. ..18 Apples, peck .... «+ +s +42 to 60 Bananas, es se es -- Garden Produce. Carrots '.. Potatoes, bag .... Potatoes, peck .. .. Cabbage, 1b.... .. .. Tomatoes, bus ..... . ++ «+ + «+10 .$1.25 .25 to 36 «+4 for 25 .1.00 ses SE TE wees Unclussified. granulated, I .. .... 9 Sugar, yellow, .. .. «i.e ..9 Sugar, fing, I> .... .. .. 13% Flour, standard, owt. ..$3.75 to $4 Rolled Oats Ib, ,..... Honey, B-1b. pail ......cc000eesTh Honey, comb... ...... snsed0 Sugar, EEE ..18 . . uu 28 ™.. when wend as'serenssslBY Cod, ™ Filets, Ib Finnan Haddie, Haddock fresh 1b. Halibut, fresh, ™ ,... ..27 to 32 Kippers, palr.... «. .. +.30 to 22 Porch, I: .sivcnvasas env. 13% Pike, 1b. Salmon, Id .. Fresh: Trout, salmon, 1d... ......18 to 26 White Fish ..... 0000 sevsieesd0 mini Butter, creamery, ® ....3 Butter, dairy, Ib. Cheese, new, Id... .. Cheese, old, ®» .. ....* Eggs, new laid, dos .. «es +223 to 30 ees d0 «ee.80 Seats ant Poultry. Beef: Steak, porterhouse, 1b.. ..30 to 31 Steak, round, Ib ........230 to 25 Boiling cuts, ® .... «vv. +. ..8 Stewing cuts, I .. 8 Beef, western ...... Beef, local, 1b ..... 0... ..8t010 'PHONE 207. Plano and Theory Voice and Sight Sthging GINSENG AND RAW FURS We will buy any quantity and pay | '10.00 per pound for Gi Ship by express or mail. We remit you cash on receipt. JOHN CKAY LIMITED JE 49:|51-10I57- BROCK. By KINGSTON ONTARIO ------ Pork: Loin, roasts, ™» .... +341 Shoulders, roasts,.. .... Cas/ Hogs, live weight, cwt. ..........0 Chops, Ib. censiens 38 20 380 Hogs, dressed, owt. .... ..13 to 16! Bacon, breakfast, ........38 to 33 Ham, smoked, ss' Lamb: Hinds, Ib.... «1 co 0s os s0see 40 Fronts, Ib.. .. .. sean sas38 Mutton, chops, Ib. ........20 to 35 Mutton, CATCase ........sss420 18 Pouitry Fowl, Bd .. .... Chickens, Ib.... EE Hay, Straw and Grains. Bran, ton ... «vs «20 ee+$37 to $28 Buckwheat, bus ... .....T70¢ to 7b¢ Hay, baled, ton ... . ...$11 to $12 Hay, loose, ton .. .$10 to $11 Oats, local, bus... .. 43 to 46 Middlings, ton.. .. .. ..$84 to $36 Shorts, ton... .... +. ..$520 16 $30 Barley .... i. sens 10078 'Wheat, local. ..$1.20 to $1.25 - Hides, Deacon skins, each . Horse hides ..... 43, 75 to $3. 25 Hides, I .... «+8010 Sheep skins, fresh . $1. 50 to $1.76 Lamb skins, fresh ..$1.50 to $1.76 Veal skins, B.. ..iv os +0ealB Wool, washed, ID... cue os «00.36 Wool, unwashed, +28 "ras ae Borders of flame-colored satin or crepe liven up scarfs of black cash- ° mere intended for Apart wear, Corns Stop Aching, - Quickly Dissolve Away The misery of a sore corn comes to an end quickly when you apply Put- nam's Corn Extractor. You can eas ily prove it in your own case. Full di rections are given in each | for the hot water trestment, and applying a few drops of 's the spot Sha is sore. You won't be | lessly rem hickened foot lumps. Sold for 35 cents by al ealers. Refuse a substitute MA | Kingston Music Studios 208 KING STREET Mr. H. Packer, A.T.CM. Violin, Junior and Kindergarten Plano .. « Miss D. Johnson, ATI Special free advantages to pupils. Pupils prepared for examination. Rates on application. AAA AA AAA FOR SALE Solid Brick House on Stone Foundation 7 some, 4 bedrooins, lights, gas, 8 piece bath, furnace, floor plugs, side entrance, porch, good cellar, garage-- good, deep lot With fruit trees--Stuart Street. For information please call at office.

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