Daily British Whig (1850), 11 Nov 1926, p. 7

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Ta -- = 2 : 7 > nr Ren Am o ' = = --=_THE DAILY BRITISH WHIC | THEOLOGY PRINCIPAL stalled on' Wednesday : Afternoon. The induction of Harold Arnold | sh a pga ARG "Ray rover Seif "\_sanspowne. J. Lf nn Gitts for t Holiday Season Bridge Sets, Desk Blotting Pads, Playing Card Cases, Score, Cards, at i I! Kent, M.A., D.D., as principal of , 4 Queen's Theological College, was . > » | carried out on Wednesday afternoon il; with fisting ceremonies and before 2 . . | represenjatives of the General Coun- ® 4 ; cll of the United Church of Canada, i 'the Bay of Quinte Conference, the We sre now taking. orders for Seranton and Virginia Anthracite Steve, Nut and Pea Coal. Ales} Bisek Gem snd Pocahontas Semi. Hard. Our Cosi ls all weighed on scales. twenty hun er coal re Let A have your order for your winter Coal AYLESWORTH BROS. Or 'phones VU, RB. Knight, 1795-W, HANLEY'S Steamship passages booked to all parts of : the world. Pass- ports arranged. Througn tickets sued over - all Trans-Atlantie, Trans-Pscifie. Alaska, Bermuda, West indies, Mediterran- » ' Jed, Round the World Steamship » y nes. | Prepaid passages arranged for 1 { and arts. you desire to bring relatives or | friends from abroad. . For full particulars apply to or write J. P. Hanley, C.P. & T.A., C.N i Riys. Can Nation so . -- : Riys. mn, corner Johnson and Ontario streets, Kingston, Ont. Oper day and night, 'Phones 99 or 2831 oi PROTECT "Your Doctor Free Total of Method That Anyone Lansdowne, Nov. 10.--The fun- "e Thou iscomfort eral Of the late Mrs. Margaret Jase Buck, half-sister of Mrs. David Rob- ertson, took place on Thursday after- noon, Nov. 4th, at the residence of { Mr. David Robertson, where she had resided and was largely attended, after which the body was laid away An the Lansdowne cemetery, the Rev. J. O. Baron officiating. The deceased had reached the ripe old age of ninety years and had been tenderly cared for by her sister, Mrs. Robertson. ! On Monday morning at the King- ston General Hospital, Mrs. George Moore, an esteemed resident of Fair- fax, passed away following an opera- tion. The late Mrs. Moore was formerly Miss Maud Landon, daugh- ter-of the late Warren Landon and Mrs. Landon, and is survived by her husband and four sons, Clark, Ira, Gerald and Roy; by her mother, Mrs. Warren Landon; two brotherd, Therion Landon, Wells Island; Ja- son Landon, Governeur, N.Y., and five sisters, Mrs. Robert Brown, Well's Island: Mrs. Joseph Chisa- more, Mrs. Samuel Tedford, Mrs. William Austin, Mrs. Hartley Fer- guson, of Lansdowne. The funeral took place Wednesday afterndon and the service was in charge of Rev. I. N. Beckstead, Lansdowne. The remains were placed in the Union cemetery. Mr. and Mrs. Alexander Burteh moved into their new home on Sat- urday. Mr. D. H. Latimer, who hag : been quite {ll suffering with asthma, was able to be out on Monday. Mrs, F. O. Mcllveen and infant son re- turned from the Kingeton General Hospital on Saturday. Efford Brown has also returned from the Kingston General Hospital. Mrs. Jane Bowen spent the week- end in Warburton with friends. Mrs. McAlister, Ottawa, is spending the winter with her daughter, Mrs. H. E. Nunn. Misses Irene Patience, Fern Stringer, Ottawa, were home for the holiday. Mr. and Mrs Kearns and party, Ottawa, spent Monday with Mr. and MPs. Barr, coming by motor, Mrs. William " Kinnard, Gananoque, épent Sunday! Dr. J. A. Lochead, Fred Mitchell, W with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John | H- Leacock, Floyd Stringer a Quinn. * Miss Hewitt spent the week- | Frank Gunness. end in Smith's Falls. Mr. McKer- cher, manager of the Bank of To- ronto, spent the week-end in Brock- ville. Miss Alma Turner, Toronto, spent Thankagiving with her mother, | Mrs. W. J. Turner. y i Ford Warren, Montreal, who was i. ious Attack | Had Bilious Attacks to o " |! and Stomach Weakness™ | here for the holiday, returnéd to| . ' g Montreal on Monday. Mrs, Sergeant, | Mrs. Wm. Robinson, Yon- Brockville, is visiting her aunt, Mrs. | Tr ) gy ler, Sask, writes: Frank Mitchell. Dr. C. H. Bird, | AK 4 | Gananoque, made calls here on} . "1 suffered from stomach and Thanksgiving Day. Mrs. Burbridge, | liver trouble, and used to have Toronto; who has been visiting Mr. bilious attacks so bad that I could and Mrs. D. A. Haig, returned home do nothing for weeks at a time: on Tuesday. fs My stomach would be so weak William Sheppard, on Oct. 22nd, | SRC . that not even a drink of water sufferéd the loss of his only brother, { would stay on it. On my sister's the late Henry Sheppard, of Minto, ' be advice, 1 began to use Dr. Man., formerly of Lansdowne. NET ; Chast's Kidney-Liver Pills, snd The Continuing Presbyterians of | must say that they have made me Lansdowne have secured a most de- | feel like a new woman." sirable site for their new church in! DR. CHASE'S KIDNEY-LIVER PILLS the Adam Beatty place, ich they | purchased from Mrs. M. J. King. |" | i One Pil a Dose, 35 cts. a box, all Dealers, or The Dr. A. W. Chase Medicine Co., Lod., Toronto, Canadas -------- f M 1 SAY "PHILLIPS" to your druggist, or you may not get genuine Phillips Milk of Magnesia prescribed by physicians for 50 years. Refuse imitations of genuine "Phillips" : Each bottle contains full directions and list of nses--any drugstore." tea on Saturday afternoon in the merly occupied dy basement of the church | Bank has been secured which Mr. and Mrs. Michael McDonald an ideal location and provides and Mr. and Mrs. Benedict Fodey| cellent accommodation for the attended the funeral of their uncle! pose. A large reading room thy late Matthew Graham, Glen-| lounge and an office takes up burnie, which was held on Tuesday. | ground floor while the upper enables the members of the Club enjoy cards and, billiards, chee! i and other games. The Clud™ during the winter months secure casionally prominent spedkers discuss public matiers of int and will also arrauge for other 1 events to which the ladies vited ! bers of the Club will include those from the municipalities ae Front of Leeds and Lansdowne ad 3 the Front of vided that the Mere ~---- Church, in bringing the congratula- tions of the General Council to both the college and the principal. Wood- row Wilson had referred to ministers as interpreters, he sald, because life was part of a great plad and it was the function of the gospel to relate men to that plan. A minister stood in & community for a vital relation- ship between man and God and he was also the centre of all the altruls- tic forces of the community. ? The efficiency and results obtain- ed by a college depended on the LANSDOWNE MEN'S CLUB IS ORGANIZED To Develop Soclal and Educa~- tional Life of the Com=- munity. Lansdowne, Nov. 10.---A club has been organised in Lansdowne the prominent men of the village and the surrounding country The object is to develop the social and] educational life of the community Rev. Cecil Winter has accepted the office of honorary president. The officers elected are: J. G. Mitchell, president; George W. Steacy, president; R. S. Shields wmaey | 0f the Theologital College, and : Queen's University. The service was NOW IS THE TIME | conducted by Rev. R. M. Hamilton, li G. A. Brown, president of the Bay | of Quinte Tonference. Dr. R. B. } | sity, publicly presented Dr. Kent and a rm | Dr. George Pidgeon conveyed the ' | | both the principal and the coliege. . : | | Theology First Course. ~ | Following the devotional part of ' i the service Dr. Taylor spoke. | "Queen's had its origin," he ssid, & ¥ {soll Canadian young men for the }' Presbyterian Church in Canada." . §! young Canadians eatering the min- able and guaranteed | istry of the Presbyterian: church their. training. Principal Grant and makes. Principal Gordon had both taken | * i of the college and was the chief i Theology had in the early days been | agency in bringing the church to . to | the moet important course and arts | pear on the college. and the college ' i} had been secondary. | be 3 " Escott. It is also prosy there may be elected nons : resident members from other digs tricts The Club will not permit | guests who are residents of the above municipalities, so that in ors der to enjoy the privileges it will bg vice. | necessary, to join : secretary It is a source of congratulall treasurer, Mr. E. BE. Johnston and| that a long felt need in Lansdow 3 F. O. Mcllveen, directors. Tha} has been so splendidly arranged fog charter members, besides the above | by Lansdowne's most representative named, are Dr. J. A. Bradley, Mr. J.| men i ] 8. McKerchar, Dr. J. W Mackia, Presbytery of Kingston, the Board eld in Convocation Hall and was TO USE THE { jot Brockville, as chaplin, and: Rev. i} Taylor, principal of Queen's Univer- | best wishes of the United Church to | "in.a desire to train on Canadian We cary only reli- | Before Queen's was established | were forced to go to Scotland to get | | their university courses there. pHuctpat. He dizacied the purpose to bear on the church. Queen's had made a big contribution to the the | church in the past, sald the speaker; l'speaker said, with medicine and| 4 would make an even greater science ranged alongside theology |... ¢rihution in the future under the In 1912 the theological | yyjieq Church. "The United Churgh college had been officially separated depends on Queen's to do her work from Queen's University but there}, "i... jistrict to win men and pre had been no actual break. The Stu-| ,.rq them for the greatest task that dents of theology were accepted by | ¢. 00 afiy . church," declared Dr. "~~ | the university students as a part of | piageon, er Cannem themselves and the professors on Rooting | In eighty-five years the college | had grown to a university, the college staff were considered as brothers Ly the professors of the university staff. Two Conservatives and one Libd i| eral have resigned from the Brit GANANOQUE The building for- | House of Commons 5 nnn nin irnmnaingill] i + bs nn --- -- Principal Kent's Career, It had been no easy matter to find a capable successor _ for Principal 89 BAGOT ST. Gananoque, Nov. 1l.---Amnounce- ment is made of the change in trade Dyde but at last the choice had [name of the Charles H. Abbott, Inc., fallen on Harold Arnold Kent form- | Hartford, Conn., to tlie Hartford erly professor of Old Testament lit- | Steel Ball Company. C. H. Abbott erature at Pine Hill College, N.8.|is president of the latter and as Dr. Kent was a native of Nova Scotla |"Harry" 1s one of Gananoque's old and a graduate of Dalhousie Uni-|boys who has made good in the versity. He graduated in arts in |commercial world, this will be inter- 1901 and for a year taught school |estinf news to many of his friends at Trinidad in the West Indies. Then | He is another one of Mr. Linklater's he enfered Pine Hill and completed [boys who has gone up the ladder, his theological course in 1905. For land was one of the most consplcu- a year he served a country parish ous of his boys to do his former and then won a scholarship which [teacher honor om that memorable entitled him to tuition in Germany. |"Linkiater Day" in our last OM In 1908 he became assistant pro- Home Week. Harry, with his fam-, tessor in Old Testament literature |ily, as well as his parents, come back at Pine Hill and in 1910 became a [to the old town every summer for tuli professor which position he fill- [thelr vacation. His firm is large ed at the timg he was chosen to be- manufacturers of steel balls for bear- come principal of Queen's Theologi- ings, steed burnishing balls, etc. eal College. Dr. Kent served over-| Mrs. Garnet Sheppard entertained seas As 8 company officer and was [at bridge last evening. later transferred to the chaplain| Mrs. F. H. Lutz and Miss Jean service. On behalf of the Univer- motored to Ottawa yesterday and sity Dr, Taylor assured his auditors J" be guests of Mrs. James McMil- th ueen"s was deeply interested . ja welfare of the college and | There was another well-patron- tht whatever affected the college |ized dance at the Scout Hall last : Stalin admits failure of Soviet re- gime and Kamenoff is fearful of the peasants' prosperity. - a. The Sunbeam Class of Grove] church are holding a silver mystic ep ---------------------------------------------- Kingston's Biggest Home Furnishers evening. Afternoon Bowling Ladies and Gentlemen, Attention ! ' From this date, Afternoon Bowling of five pins will be at the rate of ten cents astring on all afternoons with the exception of Saturdaysand Holidays. also touched the university. -- Authority and Freedom. Following the actual induction ceremony Principal Kent spoke on "Authority. and Freedom in Re- ligion." In the course of his address the speaker showed that there has always been a desire on the part of some people for an infallible auth- ority in religion and a desire bn the part of other people to exercise that 'authority. ' Another "faction had fought against this temporal author- ity preferring the authority of their own consciences. The laws of the Jews had been | g6t up as the first infallible author- ity but certain men such as St. Paul found no eal satisfaction in carry- The evangelistic meetings. in the Oddfellows' Temple are being well atténded. Mrs. Goss is a splendid speaker, and, coupled with a very pleasing personality, brings ber hear- ers back repeatedly. Many come in each evening from all parts of the sumounding country. Mme. J. Mullin, Brinston, ig the guest of "her aunt, Miss Anne Shiels, King street west. Col. and Mrs. F. J. Mooney and Mrs. John Mobney motored to Lyn and Brockville yesterday. Mrs. PF. H. Lutz, Mrs. Stanley Shiels, Mrs. J. Mullin, Miss Annde Shiels and Miss Jean Lutz motored to Ogdensburg on Thanksgiving and spent the day with friends. Harry Woods of the Algoma Steel { NE i | Bl Tid RL LLL fy f (a fie ( --- ing out these lawé but through the example of Christ théy had found an unknown freedom. Christianity had made rapid headway among the slaves of the pagan nations also be- cause it granted them a sense of freedom. In the second or third \ecentury however the church began to show an outward anthority. When the church had tried to use force to improve this authority on the world it had brought about the Protestant Reformation. In the seventeenth century the Protestants had tried to set up the infallible authority of the scriptures and the doctrine of the literal and mechani. cal inépiration of the scriptures was born. { tions of Bengué--BUT-- Tntaliible. - x : if you want quick and certain The Domestic Studio Rake. 7 Ben WEAR -EVER Grandmother toiled in a "kitchen" : among pots and pans--but madam | ams ood amb sla vy | fide 2 a A v : =~ ; Q *" domestic studio" equipped with ALUMINUM Corporation is in town to-day. C. Noel Wilde, Canadian trade commissioner stationed at Mexico, was in Gananoque on Tuesday. Simmons' Special Outfits All Set Up in Grand Ars ] ray on Our Spacious Floors. . | THREE PIECES FOR THE PRICE OF TWO---ONLY $25.00 $2 SIMMONS' BEAUTIFUL ALL-STEEL 2" CONTINUOUS POSTS BEDS-id Walnut or Oak wood finishes. 5 Your cholce of ALL-STEEL NO. 90 SPIRAL SPRING or ALL-STEEL WOVs EN WIRE with heavy cable sidos--soft and resent. ' ; SIMMONS' ALL-FELT MATTRESS in perial edges, iors JAMES REID THE HOME OF PURE BEDDING LTE J Meeting at Napanee. The Froantenac-Lennox - pe. . fr Tasty Dishes This book ln many sugses 0 An the are easily Write The Borden Co. Limited, Montreal. Prohibi- tionists held a meeting In Napanee on Wednesday night, when ad- dresses were given in the interests of the cause, but no action was taken regarding placing a candidate in- the field for the Ontario Legis lature. Addresses were given by Rev. Mr. Irwin of Toronto, and Rev. Mr. Wilsod and Rev. Mr. Tan. ton of Napanee. ; over facilities grandmother never knew, replete with sparkling, long lasting ear-Ever"' Aluminum Utensils. ef

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