Daily British Whig (1850), 28 Sep 1926, p. 7

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

| will find a complete stock of Text Books, Queen's Stationery, Fountain Pensat « RUerow sco ge $35 Wristlets we The child must see ol to learn -- our optométirical kill overcomes ~ duvenile visual de- 3 § a A LA CARTE Best Music by new JEWELLERS 168 PRINCESS ST. A ams FETT Carpen "Phone 987 See us for all ximas of work, Estimates gtven on new Soors iald. ' Have your hardwood floors clean. od with our mew floor cleaning wpa. chine. . | Hard Wood | Kindling and Slabs, ASTLES CAFE DINNER 550. AT ALL HOURS mic Victor i ' Phone 2829 Furnaces, $8 per ton delivered, per ton delivered. §| & membership of 100,000. VISIT 70 GANANOGDE (Continued from Page 1.) Clubs such as the Rotary Club, the Canadian Club and so on. © What Kiwanis Is. Kiwanis had produced sg great many men and discovered many men, the.apeaker said. I; was fount: éd.in 1915 and since that time its growth had been remarkable. With only a few men to start in 1915 it has grown to-day to 1,500 clubs with It was the largesg service club in the -world, Kiwanlan Mills said. He pointed out that the word "Kiwanis" had no meaning in itself but it was what Kiwanians made it mean. It was not a religious organization but it believed in God, it was not a relief Organization but it did untold good In relief work, it was not a political organization but it believed in good Soverament and it was not an edu- cation organization but it believed In good schools. It did not mean merely a good thme for a group of men at meetings once a week but it taught the modern ides of the Gold- en Rule and that is what Kiwanis stood for. * The speaker declared that Xi- wanis was a driving force ten ing to- ward newer and higher objectives and to-day it was doing what no other organization had ever thought of dalng before, Kiwanian Mins steled that Kiwanis developed the spiritual side of & man fin that it taught him not always to think of the material things of life. The suc. cess of nations, of communities and of individuals depended upon the spiritual force of men and that was what Kiwanis brought out in men. It stood for Integrity, faith, indus- try, vision, thrif; and an interest in the other fellow. The aims ang ddeals of Kiwanis, the speaker sald, were to give' ad- vance to the human and spiritual ahead of the material, to advance the Golden Rule on er business and pro- fessional life, to make more aggres- sive citizenship, to provide a man with the ability to form friendships and develop a community spirit and & public opinion that would make good will. He explained the operations of a Kiwanis Club, pointing out that there must be a membership of 35 or over where men of different pur. suits and activities would come to- gether. Kiwanian Mills went into the organization end of such a club and pointed out some of -the rules connected therewith, as laid down by International Kiwanis. S------ Making Good 'The speaker things in phasized was in ths ment of the useful citizen. He do- clared tha® there were. too many 'useless good citizens" in cities and towns and ome of the aims of Ki- wanis was to make them useful. He meant by a useless good citizen, x man who centred his activities about his own home or his property with- out thought of helping the other fel- low. Kiwanis, he sald, helped those who needed help and jt took in thousands of activities in carrying out In Kingston Ki- gréat good and he believed that it had a great future before it. The speaker told of the #if- teen committees of Kiwanis ang What . their work embraced, thus, showing the various branches of community lite in which Kiwanis Kiwanis stood for a man and member. hip in Kiwanis created an obliga- tion to fellow men, to the commun. ity, to the country and to God. Sn Praised . A hearty vote of thanks was ten: déred the speaker by Kiwanian Alan Meiklejohn who at the same time extended the congratulations of the that was em- broper develop: A BIG NIGHT OF FON FOR THE BOY SCOUTS There Are Now Four Patrols In the First Kingston "+ Troop. : PY ng LY BRITISH WHIG GANANOQUE Gananoque, Sept. 28. --Mr. and Mrs. Frank Keys lef: at the week-end Ruth Hood was the charming lit- tle hostess of a birthday party last Saturday, 'when 'she entertained number of her young friends. Miss Nina Meggs, R.N,, and Miss Sadie Meggs have returnéd atber short time In the Privy Council past few weeks with wis. chamber yesterday afternoon. At the break-up of the meeting, Premier King said that there was nothing | announce. | selection now from among ® ihe guest of Mr. on Wednesday season brings new home things-- utumn styles in Furniture, ~~ © The new season styles are now on our floors and w who aspire to exclusiveness as well as fashionableness are mobie premium presentations, DISTRIBUTORS FOR SNYDER'S "SANI-BILY." JAMES REID | LEADING UNDERTAKER "Phone 147 for Invalid Coach. ™ ON, | will leave for Canada and the © ed States next month. Queen Marie sacrificed her some time ago after an attack fluenza. She found bobbed convenient and comfortable ¢ : 4 has virtually: decided to continue. wear her hair short. : and Mrs. R.'J. Chad- wick: Clayton Chamber of Commerce will be entertained here by the Canadian Club at the Brophy House fr evening. -- Queen Marie is Bobbed. Bucharest, Roumania, Sept. 28. .| Queen Marie will have the distinc. Hurlbut, ) Mrs Verner Chadwick, Ottawa, is tion of being the firs bobbed-hair Queen to visit America. The queen % ! { I i ™ N » At the great General Motors plant in Oshawa, another ater Service ' pry qe And it foretells an era of + » for it will be devoted to of the popularly priced new member of the whose success has automotive climax to modern factory is being To the sound of the riveter"s hammerandthe song of the car- penter's saw, it rises... a fitting the sixty years in which this insti- as pi a vital part in the promo- again even greater service the General Motors family already electrified the

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy