HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1916-01-13, Page 7T.hurs'day, January 13th,, 1910.
CENTRAL
aid
5 TRATFORD. ONT.
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D.A.i1leLachlan, .Principal
Live Poultry
WANTED
We are in the market for all kinds
of Live and Dressed Poultry at top
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Poultry taken ever* day at
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morning at IIolracsviille.
Milk -Fed Chickens
We are prepared to pay extra prices
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properly
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chickens ready d
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'Winter Eggs _
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Gale-Laatitilis &- Co., !Ailed
RACE
LOUIS '�'
((inion -Branch Phone 190
tiatmaeataa.aaaaalusm. ateiseC•AAste
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Banos
See and here our finest
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Organs,
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Author of the "Pillar of Light,"
"The Wings of the Mora -
leg" and "The Captain of the
Kansas."
Copyright. 1909, . by Edward J. Clode
AFTER GRIPPE
Mrs.Findley Made Strong By Vinod
Severy, Kana.---" The Grippe left me
in a weak, k nervous,
run-down condition.
I wee too
k to do my housework and
could not sleep. After trying different
medicines without benefitYinol restored
my health, strength and appetite. Vinol
is a grand medicine and every weak,
should
take
-down .woman
us 'run
nervo
it M
—rs. G
r1o.FdNDLDY.
Vino( Our d
elictu
cod
liver
and u
o
n
tonic, sharpens the appetite aids diges-
tion,
i es
-
tion
enriches the blood,and
builds up
natural strength and energy.
3. L. Ci , h1 oto
oveln, Druggist
'
Watts, That's our anchorage—over
there.". And he pointed to the mouth
of a narrow channel between South
point and the Isle des lrregates,the lat-
ter a tiny islet that almost blocks
entrance to a shallow bay into which
runs a rivulet of good but slightly
brackish water• and
The ship slowed perceptibly,
Hozie" busied himself with' the lead'
which a sailor was swinging on
starboard side from ,the small plat-
form of the accommodation ladder.
Iris did not know what was said, but
to Coke
repeated the
queer figures p
n s
seemed to be satisfactory.. Headlands
and bills crept nearer. The rocky
arms of the Island closed in on them.
A. faint scent as of sweet grasses
reached them from. the shore. iris
could see several people, nearly all o
them men In uniform, hurrying about
with' an air of excitement that betok-
ened the unusual Perhaps a steamer's
edvent,on the south side of the island
was a novelty.
Now they were in a fairly smooth
roadstead. The remnants of the gale
were shouldered away from the ship
by the towering cliff that jutted ; out
on the left of the bay. The crew were
mostly occupied iin'cnlea•ing blocks and
Lamle and swinging two lifeboats out-
ward on their davits.
"All ready forrard?" roared Coke.
Heeler ran to the forecastle. He found
the carpenter there, standing by the
windlass brake.
"All ready, sir!" he cried.
Coke nodded to him.
"Give her thirty -live," he said,' mean-
ing thereby that the anchor should be
allowed thirty -live fathoms of chain.
The turbulent current was surging
seedofa
across the bows
with thep
mill race, so Coke brought the vessel
round until she lay broadside with the
land and headed straight against the
set of the stream, it was his intent to
drop nnehnr while in that -position and
help any undue strain no the cable by
an ucmas!nual turn or the propeller.
"'Keep her there!" he said. half turn-
ing to the mum at the wheel. Be
changed the Judicator from "full
speed" to "slow ahead." In a few sec-
onds the anchor chain would have rat-
tled through the hawse hole when
something happened that was incom-
prehensible, stupefying -something ut-
terly remote and strange from the
ways of civilized men.
The Andromeda quivered under a
tremendous buffet. There came a crash
of rending iron and an instant stop-
page of the engines. Almost merging
into the noise of the blow came a loud
report from the land, but that in its
turn was drowned by the hiss of steam
from the exhaust.
Coke appeared to be dumfounded for
an instant, Recovering himself, he
ran to the starboard side, leaned over,
looked down at a torn plate that
showed its jagged edges just above
the water line and thee lifted a blaz-
ing face toward a point halfway up
the neighboring cliff, where a haze lay
like a veil of gauze on the weather
scarred rocks.
"You blasted pirates!" he yelled, rais-
ing both clinched fists nt the hidden
of „a. ,? enema rreen9 V V ere vvervvvvv e
••wkevsNsw,"b'VVVtiVV, .VGG",..7W'WM'
Skates
second shell Was. alenur .l'U'. ,ne urcutsn
the chnrthouse nod cleat the bridge of
its occupants. Striking high and for-
ward, it had robbed the Andromeda of
her last chance.
CHAPTER V. -'
smOwsNG WHAT tir•.eMME OP, TIM AN-
TE
island artillery del not suc-
ceed in : hitting the crippled
ship again. Three more shells
were fired, but each projectile
screamed harmlessly Env out at sen A.
trained gunner. noting these filets,
would, reason that the shore battery
made good practice in the first In-
stance solely because. its ordnanee was
trained at a known range. Indeed, he
might even hazard a guess that the
Andromeda's warm 'reception was ar-
ranged long before her masts and fun-
nel rose over the horizon. Thatthe
islanders intended nothing less than
her complete destruction was self evi-
dent. Withoutwarning
the slightest a g
they bad tried to sink her, and now
that she was escaping the further at-
tentions of the iieldpieces a number of
troops stationed on South point and
the isle des P'regates began to pelt her
with bullets.
iris, when the first paralysis of fear
had passed, when her stricken senses
resumed their sway and her limbs lost
their palsy, flinched from this new
danger and sank sobbing to her knees
behind the canvas shield of the bridge.
Somehow this flimsy shelter, which
sailors call the "dodger," gave some
Sharpened
I while you wait
at the old stand
y i
Matainealelelealelleles
Byam & Sutter
Sanitary Plumbers
Phone 7. ,
CLINTON NEWt ERA ,.
IlnliU up I IIe Ile I:11111 U Lire sheat eau
Itl ist among the "Il ilns, the Oil stain- .'
ed. glint 'loosing engineers had not
quitloil Ihl it Iloa neat they had taken
r
owe
•asp
vI
such trrPutntlou. i Y In their
to Insure the ship s safety. A light
hiot:e•In on the fog In the gel's mind
O+etnnow at the Icily mite oYeternit,
9
"
one might ley til htlp others
The
thon;hl brnu b u
la
Y
of comfort.
She was about t:o (dolt 'Por, the speakers
whet) ,a billet thrilled n hole in it panel
close
ther
514
e.
Seite began
to
run
tunics through
e •rill r1
'r u t t 4
I, h .
'n 1
again, .
g
tha forward gan
�
wv
snowedved
that
the
shipvtti t
n Ltc
alose
`t
othe
land,
NV mere men tit bine unlfnrmv wearing
curlousiv• shelled ants ,anti or Site gait
•
vs.; were r.tttc:red aurora:;, til 1, roves,
sonmi'. Staneling,vottltt_ kneeling. some,
prone, tint nll teeing stoma, aim.
But it elltiw'e'd something more He
r!et', was new lying stdoways un, ''l'it
inlaid sleek nf.1St Yerorn'•tIl It O. ptit'1'
lasnpported ht nruLP or ale right trent
tl{s left nandwas ptt„ed to 515 fore' I.
sense of safety. Her throbbing brain
was incapable of lucid thought, but it
was borne in on her mistily that the
world and its occupants had suddenly
gone mad. The omen of the blood red
water had justified itself 'most horri-
bly. The dead carpenter was sprawl-
ing over the forecastle windlass. His
hand still clutched the brake. The
sailor at the wheel bad been shot
through the throat and had fallen
limply through the open doorway of
the chart room. He lay there, cough-
ing up blood and froth and gasping his
life out. The two men wounded by the
second shell were creeping down the
forward companion in the effort to
avoid the bail of lead that was beating
on the ship. Hosier was raising him-
self on hands and knees, his attitude
that of a man who is dazed, almost in-
sensible.
Watts bad gone from the bridge. He
might have been whirled to death over
the side like the unfortunate foremast
hand she bad seen tossed from off, the
forecastle. But Coke, whose charmed
life apparently entitled him to act like
a lunatic, was actually balancing him-
self on top of the starboard rails of
the bridge by clinging to a stay, hav-
ing climbed to that exposed position
in order to burl oaths at the soldiers
on shore. lute had gone frantic with
rage. His cap had either fallen off or
been torn from his bend by a bullet.
Ills squat, powerful figure was shak-
ing with frenzy. He emphasized each
curse with a passionate gesture of the
free hand and arm. He said. among
other things rind with uo lack of forr•e-
ful adjectives.. that if be could only
come to close quarters with some of
the Portygee assassins on the island
he would tear their sanguinary livers
out.
The Andromeda. uncontroliable as
destiny and quite as heedless of her
human freight, swung around With the
current until her bows pointed to the
islet occupied by the marksmen. All
at once Coke suspended his flow of in-
vectives and rushed Into the chart
room, where Iris beard him tearing
lockers open and throwing their con-
tents on the deck. To enter he was
obliged to leap over the hotly of the
dying man. The action was gro-
tesque, callous, almost inhuman. it
jarred the girl's agonized transports
back into a species of spiritual calm, a
mental state akin to the fatalism often
exhibited by Asiatics when death ' is
imminent and not to be denied. The
apparent madness of the captain was
now more distressing to herthan the
certain toes.ofthe ship or•the iavisi-
ble missiles that clanged into white
patches on the iron plates. cut sudden
holes and scars in the woodwork or
whirred through the air with a buzzing
whistle of singularly menacing Sound.
She began to be afraid of remaining
on the bridge. tier fear was not due
to the really vitai fact that it was so
exposed, It arose from the purely
feminine consideration that she was
sure Coke had become a raving ma-
niac,
and she dreaded meeting him
when, if ever, he reappeared.
A�bullet struck the front: frame of
t
,
v
n
panes of
the chart
room, and seecn
glass were shattered witha fearful
din. That decided her. Coke, if he
were not killed, would surely be driv-
en
out. She sprang to her feet anti
literally ran down the steep ladder to
the saloon deck. Through the open
door of the officers' mess she witnessed'
another bizarre act—an act quite as
extraordinary in its way as Coke's
jump over the steersman's body. 'Inn
the midst of this drama of death n
destruction Watts was standing there,
with head thrown back and uplifted
arm• gulping down 0 •'tumberful of
some dark colored liquid, draining it
to the dregs, while he held a black
bottle in the other hand.
Then from somewhere she heard a
gruff voice:
'
"Rev' ye,shut off steam, Mac
far-
In ne?"
O, ay, it's a' snag below till the
water reaches the furnaces," Came
alae answer,
So some of the men were doing their
duty, t1'hauk god for tliittl Unde.
bead: He was trying to rise. With en
intuition that was phenomenal under
the circumstances Iris realized that he
was screened from observation for the
moment by the windlass and the
corpse that lay across it. But the
ship's ever increasing speed and •the
curving course of her drifting would
soon bring him into sight, and •then
those merciless riliemen would shoot
him down.
"Oh, not that, not that!" she walled
alobd.
An impulse stronger than the thein-
right'-"Usua)!y?'' exclaimed the lady.
bloodsheet ofo self -g innservavei causedI "I 'thought one should always paintNa-
waite to tingle her veins. She had ture'as one sees it." "No," was the
take that one look, idend now, I when one sees it
waited to reply; "certainly not
as to avoid being seen like that."—London Standard.'
bent double so
bythe soldiers, she sped back through
the gangway, gained the
open n d
eek
In
a Trice.
crouched
.
he
on
the
a
to the bulwarksphrase "in
close th a
the
s use p
port side and thus reached unscathed Many Person
companion the foot theof down which
the wounded men bad crawled. The
sine plates on the steps were slippery
with theirs blood, hat she did not falter
at the sight. Up she went, stooped
y etearessewruvereme Weremm Jwu+n,
'OW
IrA13°WAY
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(Further 'particulars on applica-
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John Rainsford & Son, city passen
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A. 0. Pattison .• station agent
EVER
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ter
in ter skin troubles, if you will follow
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Buk
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Zam
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This wonderful herbal balm ends
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Art occasional application of Sam-
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see that the children use it' liber-
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iber-ally.. Zam-Buk also cures piles,
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All druggists and stores, 50c.
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Walsrler and the Girl.
A girl amateur once showed some of
her dreadful attempts at painting to
Whistler. "I always paint Nature
just as I see it," she 'said. „H, r
said Whistler, examining one of me
• "I admit that is usually
"toe MASTED PIRATES!" HE yNLLrtn,
battery which had tired a twelve
pound shell into the doomed ship.
The Andromeda herself seemed to
recognize that she was..stricken unto-
death. She fell swirl' before the cur-
rent with the aimless drift of a log.
"Let sol" bellowed Coke, with fren-
zied pantomime of action to Hosier.
1t was too late. Before the lever con-
trolling the steam windlass that
re-
leased the anchor could be shoved over`
anothershell plunged' through the thin
iron' plates iu the bows, smashing a'
steam pipe 'end jamming the hawser
gear by its impact. The missile berst
with a terrific report. A sailor 'was
knocked overboard, the carpenter was
killed outright, two other mennwere
seriously wounded, and Hosier receiv-
a blow on the forehead from a fly-
ing scrap of metal that stretched him
on the deck.
The gunners on shore 'had not allow-
ed for the drifti„g of the ship. That
e7
•
40041
" QIIz08I" ens PANTED. "LET ME arum
You'I"
over Hosier and placed her strong
young arms round his body.
"Quick!" she panted. "Let me help
yowl You will be killed if you remain
here l"
Her voice -seemed to rouse him as
from troubled sleep.
"I was hit," he muttered. "What is
It? What is wrong?
"Oh, come, come!" she screamed, for
some unseen agency tore a transverse
gash in the planking not a foot in
front of them.
CONTINUED NEXT WEEK.
Children Cry
�\
FOR FLETCHER'S
CASTORIA
1, Y SCHO 5
Lesson Iii.—First Quarter, For
Jan. 16, 1916.
THE INTERNATIONAL %SERIES.
Textof he Lasso
Acts iii 22-41.
Lesson,' Ac the
Memory Verses,
38, 39—Golden
Text>
Prepared mentor P p J
—Com
21 Y
Acsu
t
Rev: D. M. Stearns.
Thls is the first recorded sermon of t:
mere man filled with the 'Spirit, and if
all sermons were molded on lime same:
pattern the ;Holy Spirit could aet•um-
plislt much more than tie Is by au or-
dinary sermon permitted to do, fur in
this sermon by Peter the Word of God
is the su'bstulce,of the discourse fie
quoted at least four portions of Scrip-
ture, t:he-prophecy of Joel: Il Sam.
vii; Psalms xvi and cx. It anvils what
would b'e called now a h)blc study,
'and I have learned in forty years of.
experience that the souls, of men every-
where: are hungering for the Word of
.God, and it is written of that alone
that it shall riot return to Him void
and that by it IIe will urcompiish I-1it
pleasure (Iso, lv, 111.
Peter quoted from Joel ii, 26-32.' to
show that this manifestation of . the
Spirit was a fulfillment of that predic-
tion, and not any wild ravingsof
drunken Men. The complete fulfillment
of Joel's words will be at the second
coming of Christ to, judge the notions
o
a •t 1 'Joel its •
and open: the eyes `of Israel
1, 2). Peter' then told them that .1e
-
sus of. Nazareth, whom God had so
manifestly approved among them, but
whom they had by wicked hands cruci-
fied, God had raised from the dead, ac-
cording to His assurance to David in
Ps. xvi and 11 Sam, vii. and had given
Him a place at His own right hand
until the time should come for Him to
overthrow His enemies according to
Ps, cx.
God had told David that Be would
establish his throne and his kingdom
forever in one of his descendants, and
our lesson says that David knew that
God meant not Solomon, but the Mes-
siah, the Christ (ii ' Sam. vii, 12.19;
Acts ii, 30), risen from the dead and
immortal. The sufferings of Christ are
'iii
most. vividly portrayed in iso. , but
His resurrection Is been there also in
verse 10. for one who dies cnn prolong
his days only by rising from the ,lead,
Notice in this discourse Peter's refer-
ences to the resurrection of Christ in
verses 24, 30, 32, 30 -that by the res-
urrection God made that same Jesus
whom they had crucified both Lord
and Christ and that He had raised up
Christ to sit on the throne of David.-
In I Pet. i, 21. we read that God raised
Him from the dead and gave Him
e glory. We seem to come nearest to
the Father's heart when we, too. give
Him glory or seek in all things to
glorify Him (I Pet. iv, 11). When the
prophet Micah predicted His birth In
Bethlehem he spoke of Him as "ruler
in Israel" (Mie. v, 2t, and in the full-
ness of time He will surely be Rhig of
the Jews on the throne of David, hat
He will also be the King of kings nnti
Lord of lords. King over all the earth
(Luke 1, 32 33; Her. xvii,. 14; xix, 10;
Zech. xiv, 0).
Being rejected (the Jews insisted on
crucifying Him, saying, "We have no
king but Caesar"—John xix. 14. 151. He
ascended, and the heaven must re-
ceive Him 'until the times of restora-
tion of all things which Goa hath spo-
ken by the mouth of all His holy proph-
ets since the world began (Acts iii, 211.
The congregation to whom Peter -de-
livered this discourse were all Jews,
devout men out of every nation
under heaven (verse 51, and when they
saw from their own Scripture, as un-
folded to them by the Spirit through
Peter, that their Messiah was to die,
and rise from the dead and thus be-
trice" who have no conception of its
meaning. A trice is the sixtieth part
of a second of time. The hour is di-
vided into sixty minutes, the minute
into sixty seconds and the second into
sixty trices, or thirds, from the Span•
tsb Iris.
Suffered Awfully
FROM
BILIOUS HEADACHES!
When the liver becomes sluggish and
inactive the bowels become constipated,
the tongue becomes coated, the stomach
foul and bilious headaches are the upshot.
Milburn's Laxa-Liver Pills will stimu-
late the sluggish liver, clean the foul -
coated tongue, do away with the stomach
1
Bases
and banish the disagreeable bilious
headaches.
Mrs. J. C. Kidd, Sperling, B.C.,
writes: I have used Milburn's Lam -
Liver Pills for bilious headaches. I
I suffered awfully until I started to take
- them. They were the only thing that
ever did me any good. I never have any
bilious headache any more,"
Milburn's Laxa-Liver Pills—arc 25c
per vial, 5 vials for $1.00, at all dealers,
'or mailed direct on receipt of price by The
T. Milburn Co„ Limited, Toronto, Ont.
PACIE SEVEN
ESECAI!Y f
WOMEN
'(Fruit -a -lives" Now Km
Woman's Best Medic
i, ,
rho
I - 'IVES
'-A 7
.UIl r
1P
fruit medicine
is panteru1
arlY:
w
O.
• suss
women, lice
me n wase
GI
Me
f
f
and gentle action audits please
In severe cases of do)es/ipali,
Machu',
•
gestiova, Bloatarrg, Saco F, led
a
In-The Bach,' Neairalgia, aria
Rune-Dowaa Constilaalion, "bruit
is the only medicine needed to
such troubles aid restore tile'
to complete health.
As e tonic, "rruit a-tives"
luable to purify and enrich t
anti build up strength and vim'
DOe- a box, (3 for i9.00, trial
At dealers or sent postpaid I
a-tives Limited, Ottawa.
Corp. ViachEits hit
Cut Out Waste—Result, Beauty.
When Joseph Pennell was in Pana-
ma he stopped to admire the lock at
Pedro Mia el. "How is it," he asked
the engineer, "that you make your
arches and buttresses as fine as those
of a cathedral?" "Oh, that's done to
save concrete," was the reply.
Economy as the basis of beauty is
not so strange as it may seem. It was
through elimination of the superfluous
that the loveliness as well as strength
of that Panama structure grew, and
the same principle may be found at the
i root of every successful work wheth-
I er of art or industry.—Craftsman.
e, •.9-i-.rt�
jll
;r
Vigra
4161110111114.1.
batd.ne'nt. IS was practically all
in flames. Women, child -en ,and
She Civilian permeation were run
Hing about Scr:aming jn terror.
Shells whistled about land ex-
plosions followed one another in
endless anccessijon, (Machine
gonna and rifles were popping
away and the artillery of -both
sideswrreworking (their hardest'.
High h u
uthe air.eller r shells
burst, lighting
up the surrounding
courtey, Bodies of nen, women,
child -Flu, and animate were laying
arounde in the open and, the roads
were littered with 'debris of all,
kinds. Tt was an Inferno such las
even Dante new et' imagined.
"Into this hell the Canad.ans
were thrust(, The Germans had
swarmed through the break in
,the, line and (there 'west fu3 y LS•,
000 of them, As a last resort, 2,-
000
;000 Canadians -were '',ordered 'to
charge the trenches they bad hast
sly constructeld. Access nearly
half a mile of open ground we
started, running up a blight in-
cline. If was run and 'then drop
to the ground. Not a shots was
fired from the (trenches at us un-,
til we were about 100 yards' away.
Met by Burst 'of 'Flame
"We were making: our last run
whccn there a as a burst of flame
front the entire 'length of the
started Tit u our men tt o
drop. First at one side, then at
the other, and .in front of me
thcly fell, We golf ,to the trench
"The Germans seemed stunned
by our attack -and many turned
and ran It was Incredible tie
small body
that Such a
shoaled attack swill ,Margo force,
Thelybelieved we were, Ilene ily
supported 'behind, when there was
really nothing in their way to
Callas and they started to fall
back. Our broken line Was soon
patehetd up.
"The Canadians were, sacrificed
but not needlessly so. Their
charge saved wn,a't little of Bol,
glum is left in the hands of
the allies."
ft was three days later when
Wackett was wounded while per-
forming a deed of daring which
won for him mention in the 'offi-
cial despatches. He refused to
talk of it Tuesday morn-
ing but facts were (learned from
other, sources.
Reescuedi "Cass'ted" Soldiers
Cut off from the main body of
hist regiment, Wackett, las a non-
comm.,
oncomm., had five men under him.
They dug themselves in as' ha Cloud
of gas swept over ahem, Some
distance to•one 'silo and in ,an
exposed position, a small body of
men fell victims to the chlorine at
tach.
Instructing, his men to enlarge
the holes they;' had sought refuge
in, Wackett crossed over to the
"gassed" men were land although
wounded' through the fleshy part
of both logs, below the knee t, man
aged to get 11 victims to safety. His
men bandaged up the s,5+1.1nds of
thernseucd asfaet ethey were
brought in.
While making hisfifteenthte rip,
a shelf but'st.behind Wackett. One
fragment -blew the top of title head
of the man be was carrying and a
small splinter' struck Wackett nn
the spine.
Again Wolindeti,
'He was later parried away him-
roll
imroll and while in a. (trench receiv-
ing first aid, en s'hnapnel shell ex-
ploded; above, several of the but
lets striking him on the • top of
the bead He was taken to Rouen
and later to England. Waeltettls
home is in Berlin,
I't
5
2
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come an immortal man, and that what
had been done by their rulers iu their
blindness was also foreseen and record-
ed, the Spirit convinced them of their
sin, and they said to Peter and the rest.
"Men and , brethren, what shall we
do?" (Verse 37.)
Peter urged them to repent and be
baptized and receive remission of sins
and the gift of the Holy Spirit. This
they gladly did, and that day about
3,000 Jews were added to the number
of the saved in Christ (verses 3S.41t.
This is one fulfillment of the welds of
the Lord Jesus, "Greater works than
these shall be de becatese I go unto the
Father" (Sopa xiv, 121. We must not
think that if we are Spirit filled we
shall always see souls saved, for Ste-
phen was filled with the Spirit and so
spoke that he received stones enough
to kill him (vi. 5, 10: iii sp-61)1. but
probably Sa'uigWnever forgot it. and it
may have bee one of the links in the
chain leadiug:to his conversion. One
who is Spirit_diled will say as Paul did.
"Christ shall be magnified in my body,
whether it be by life or by death"
iPliii I, 20: Rona xiv, Si. •
Let us learn from verse 23 of our les-
son that God's foreknowledge of what
wicked people will do to His people
does not lessen the guilt of the evil-
a:
excuse them.
anyway
o in
es nor doe
Let Its learn also that God permits evil-
doers
doers and even the devil,`to work out
unintentionally Elis purposes, for He
maketh the wrath of man 'to praise
Him and restrains the reminder • kes.
leave 10,. clay we ever rejoice In the
risen Living Christ, His finished work.
His present ministry of intercession,
His coming again and In all the glory
of Iris Rin,gdom,,enntinuing steadfast -i
ly in the apostles' doctrine. with glad-
ness (42-47) By the game Spirit who
dwelt in :Mans Cellist we may he ap-
proved of Geld one( here Bust, wort, in
us Sue h works that God shall be glort.
fled in as Irene 1.1 Tim, ii, Mt.
CASTO I A
Fi'i'r Infants and Children
In else For Over 30 Years' •
Alwayse bears"
th`e.
5iantature of •
headquarters
fof" Flour
Now is the time to him your Winter
supply of Flour. We cerry a full steel[
of the following Mande, —
Purity Five Rases
rtun
Milne
Exeter
Tavistock ' London
Idistewel White Plume (pastry
And also a brand of Rresakf,ist Food,
made from choice Mlaniioba wheat, at
.5 pounals for 25e
To Make Your Hens i ay
7'his winter, we reoontmend oar
Lavine Moe,'. Beef Scram, Oester Shell,
Bone Meal, Grit and Charcoal. ,
We always carry a full line of
Bran . tiow Grade Fleur
'Shorts Molasses Meal .
Oil Cake Dairy Meal
Highest Prices Paid for all
Kinds of Grain -
Son
�' ,J�eii�(19�5
Flour - ind [teed: phone 11)9