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-777.7
WI ADVANCE -TIMES
Thursday,
'r.
DON'T THROW THAT TIRE AWAY
114THEN you have a blow-out, you can
do far better than Just discard the
tire and buy a new one.
The chances are a repair will fix it up so
that it will complete the mileage you
expected—and the cast will be lower than
you thought.
We repair balloon and high-pressure
sizes and our 'work is giving mileage.
That's the only. recommendation
necessary.
Our equipment is good -we use the latest
methods—the materials we use are made
by Goodyear.
Bring in a tire or a tube and let us show
you a money -saving repair.
WINGHAM TIRE &
VULCANIZING DEPOT
Phone 298.
HOW TO TURN
AT
NTERSECTIONS
For a RIGHT TURN
—get next to curb and
turn corner as sharply
as possible.
For a LEFT TURN—
get to middle of street
--- give signal with
hand -- at centre of
intersection turn as
sharply as possible.
HIGHWAY SAFETY
Clip this simple dia-
gram. These direc-
tions may save you an
accident some time.
31
COMMITTEE
�1filiiU�iVli��lil/,,,Le, eeL ...e..V.;IhLJFel1ged
THE HYDRO SHOP
FII.IGIDAIRE
Drop in at the Hydro Shop and see a demon-
stration of Electric Refrigerators.
•
Make your own ice from pure clear water.
Preserve your food in a cold dry atmosphere.
Wiagii m Utilities Commission
Crawford Block. Phone 156.
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OUR TRUCKS ARE GATHERING
Cream and Eggs
CALL 271 FOR TRUCK SERVICE
OPEN SATUR AY EVENINGS
. E UNITED FARMERS' CO.OPERATIVE.
COMPANY* LIMITED,
- .
'J�xl! �11�111f1l�
Ontario.,
0 Perfect Love, all human thought
transcending,
Lowly we kneel in, prayer before
Thy throne,
That theirs may be the love which
knows no ending,
Whom Thou for evermore dust join
in one.
0 perfect Life, be Thou their full
assurance
Of tender charity and steadfast.
faith,'
Of patient hope, and quiet brave en-
durapce,
With childlike trust that fears:, nor
pain nor death.
Grant 'them the joy which brightens
earthly sorrow, '
Grant them the peace which calms
all earthly strife;
And to life's day the glorious
known morrow
That dawns upon eternal love and
life.
an -
This beautiful and appropriate hymn
for a marriage service was written for
a tune, to which it was sung on the
special occasion for which it had been.
composed: That other tunes have been
set and commonly used to it is due
probably to the attractively sweet
delicacy and lovely devotion of the
words,—perhaps also to the fact that
its original tune was composed ;for
and seemsto .belong especially to St
Ambrose's hymn, "0 Strength and
stay, upholding all creation," which
is often used at funeraltservices.
The daughters of the Rev: 1, G.
Blomfield, Rector of a London church,
also granddaughters of a former Bish-
op of London, were very fond of the
tune called. "Strength and Stay," writ-
ten by the well known composer Rev
Dr. Dykes to the hymn the Rev. John
Ellerton and Mr, F. J. A. Hort'trans-
lated from the. Latin of St. Ambrose,
Bishop of Milan, who died in 397:
One evening the young ladies were
talking about the approaching niarci-
age of one 'of them, when the future
bride expressed the wish that there
was a hymn which could be sunk* at
her nvedding to their favorite tune.
"What the use of having a poetess
in the family if she cannot' makeus
a hymn for the occasion?" demanded
the youngest of the family with a
laughing glance at the eldest daughter
who had already written some charm-
ing poetry.
Dorothy Francis Blomfield, a merry.
though thoughtful young woman of
twenty-five, returned the glance with a
smile, and a few minutes later with-
drew to her own room without attrac-
ting the attention of the others.
She was not absent. for very long,
but appeared with our hymn, which
she had just composed, on a sheet of
note -paper. "Here? Come and try this
other," she . said approaching the piano.
In a moment or two the family had
clustered around the manuscript and
were singing over the new hymn; to
its own tune, That all were pleased
with it, was not to be wondered at
for th hymn speedily became a favor-
ite with all who heard it.
A few years later Princess Louise
daughter of Edward VII, then Prince
of Wales, who like her mother Queen
Alexandria was an accomplished musi-
cian -asked that it might be snug at
her wedding in July x889, Sir Joseph
l3arnaby made an anthem of the words
with music. by his own skilful hand,
for that occasion.
In that same year the copyright of
the hymn was seemed for the "Sup-
plemental Hymns to Hymns. Ancient
and Modern," : wherein it was set to
a fine tune by Dr. Monk, musical
editor of 'Hymns Ancient and Mod-
ena" with "Strength and Stay" sugg-
ested as an alternative tune,
Since then it has been. sung at in-
numerable marriages and has made
its way into all the principal hymn-
books in the language,.
Its author was born at Finsbury
Circus, London, England, in e8s8. She
wrote our hymn in 1883. She married
a member of the Gurney family, to
which hymnology is under 'many ob-
ligations for hymnals compiled and
hymns written, It is the general opin-
lop that no more appropriate and
magnificent hymn has been written
in modern times,
'Considering the circumstances und.
er which the liymtt was written it
seemed but, right that the tune which
s,
tit, >in ed
t it should be printed herewith,
"Strength and Stay" is one of the
many quite successful tones composed
by the Teev, Dr. Dylees, of St. Oswald's
Church, Durham, F.ng., who gave us
among others our well-known tunes to
"Jesus! Lover of my soul," 'Lead,
Kindly Ixglrt," "Saviour again to Thy
dearName," "Holy,, Holy, Holy!" and
"C:tethel Father, Strotig to save,"
TDA SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON
LESSON XIII.-- JUNE 24th.
Review; "Jesus, the Saviour,"
GOLDEN TEXT,— Choose youl this
day whom ye may serve. ---Josh, 24.x5.
x. Friends and Foes Review.
For this review prepare a list of
the friends of` Christ mentioned in
our quarter's lessons and another list
of his foes that have been introduced
this quarter. The names of the
friends may be written separately on
slips of gilt or blue paper, and those
of his foes with white ink on black
paper or with red ink on white paper.
A weekn, a
idvance let each pupil draw
thename of a friend: of Christ and the
name. of one. of Christ's foes, and
wine a one -minute account of each,
which he will read in class on re-
view Sunday, If necessary, some of
the nasnes:will be duplicated, and if
there is not time for each to read both
of his essays, he will read only one,
"friends" and "foes" alternating The
friends will be Peter, James, 'John,
the ladwith the lunch, the rich young
ruler, the owner of the colt, the man
with the pitcher, Lazarus, Mary, Mar-
tha, the centurion, the repentant rob-
ber, Mary Magdalene, etc. The foes
will be the Pharisees, Sadducees, Her-
odians, scribes, clrlef priests, Judas,
Caiaphas,' Annas, Herod, Pilate, the
unrepentant robber, etc.`
II.: The Five -Knots Review
The younger classes will enjoy this
form of review, for which you will
use the beautiful set of Lesson Pict-
ures published by the, publishers of
this volume. Take a shadow box of
the size of 'the picturesand cut a
window in the front large enough to
display a picture. Remove also the
top of the box, so that the pictures
can be pulled up from the box through
the top. Put the• box in a frame about'
twice as high as the box, the top be-
ing a round piece of wood over which
runs a' string in which five knots have
been made at equal intervals. Drive
into the back of the round piece two
tacks so close together that they will
hold each knot when the string is
slipped between them. The string ends.
in a clip which is fastened tothe first..
picture.,
The first knot stands for "V.rho?"
and the pupil who tells who the
characters are in,thc first picture pulls
the string down to the first knot, thus
raising the picture one . fifth of the
way. The second knot stands for
"Where?" and the pupil telling where
the first picture is located pulls it up
to the second, knot. Thus with the
other knots, which stand for' "What"
(what the objects in the picture are,
exclusive of the persons), "Deeds"
(what the persons of the picture are
doing), and "Words" (what they are
saying).. After each picture has been
pulled all . the way- up, it is removed,
and the string is fastened by the clip
to the picture . next .in - order. After
the lesson the pictures may be die
tributed among the pupils as ;souls-
enirs of the quarter's work.
III; A Christ -Centered Review.
This review, which may be adapted
to classes of any age, considers with
each lesson, what it teaches about
Jesus Christ, His character, nature,
and teachings, . The pupils may be
asked to make at home a list of the
lessons of the quarter, writing after
each the chief fact about the Saviour
which it is thought to teach, in the
class you will take up the lessons
one at a time, considering all the
Christ-fa.ets brought up by the' class,
and determining what will be regarded
as the leading fact of that lesson.
IV, A Pin -Cushion; Review,
Take a large pincushion --.several of
them, if necessary -and pin to it a
Considerable number of slips of paper,
each bearing a question on the lessons'
of the quarter. Cover all the lessons,
and write about ten questions on each
lesson, bringing out all the essential
facts of the several' lessons ---time, per-
sons, places, other facts,sayings, tea-
chings. Take pains to make each ques-
tion perfectly clear and independent,
so that an understanding of it does
depend on any other question. Mix
them all . up in pinning them:. to ,the
cushion, ' The pupils will take turns in
removing a question from the cushion,
reading it aloud, and answering it, if
possible; if not, the pupil' sitting next
will 'nave a chance, Whoever answers
it correctly will keep the slip, and the
pupil capturing the most slips will
be the .victor in the contest and may
receive a reward, such as a tacok on
the life of Christ or n copy of ' the
Gospel of Math
V. An ;'Essay Review,
'The older classes may 'review the
quarter by means of a series of essays,
cacti trcatin:g the central theme of one
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Each
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INCLUDING ROAS1RS, PAILS, KETTLES, SAUCE PANS,
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Make a Selection From These Special Prices
15c—Cup§; Mugs, Cake Cutter, Scoops, Dipersf; Egg Turners, Moulds, Soap
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19 c --Medium Size Pie Plate and Round Johnny Cake Dish.
29c—six Mould. or Eight. Mould Cookie Pans, Deep Bread or Cake Dish.
39 c -Semen Size Dish. Pan, Limited Quantity only. Come Early..
59 C—Styles as quoted above. The Best Value Obtainable.
98 C --A big feature line with us, Heavy Quality Aluminum—Tea Kettles, Tea
Pots, Coffee Percolators, Large Pails, Large Dish Pans, Roasters,
Double Boilers, Sauce Pans, Potato Pots, Preserving ` Kettles, Col-
lenders, Etc.
tore,al er h },
ingh
6.y5�
of the. lessons. Limit the essays to
three or four minutes, according to
the time at your disposal. The follow-
ing subjects are suggested:
Lesson x.—Crossbearing in 1928.
Lesson 2;—Proofs of our 'minor-
ality.
Lesson 3.—Transfigured Lives,
Lesson 4,—Is the Average Ameri-
can Home Christian?
Lesson s. -The Tyranny of the Dol-
lar.
Lesson 6.—Ambitions Worth Cher-
fishin
Lessg.on 7,—Signs of the Kingdom:
Lesson 8.— Ieighborliness.
Lesson g.—Are modern Christians
Faithful Stewards?
Lesson so.—'True Communion with
Christ.
Lesson .rn—Dealing Honestly with
Christ.
Lesson 12.—Crucified, with Christ,;
VI. A Cross Review,
Each 'pupil will be instructed 'to;
snake at home during the weelc a
pasteboard cross, about a foot high,
covering it with gilt paper or in some
other 'way adorning it. Then he will
go over the ' twelve lessons of the
quarter and choose from 'each the
sentence or phrase which he regards'
as'' a central lh cent al point of the lesson„ He
will copy each of these on a slip of
paper and pin it to the cross. In the
recitation you will compare the ere
tracts,.. and decide after discussions
Which most accurately represents each
Iesson. This extract will then be writ-
ten on a large cross which the 'teach-
er will have made and brought to the
class.
Works Hard, Danes,
Cams 3 Lbs. a Week
"I work hard, dance and have gain-
ed 3 pounds a week since taking "Vin
al. My nervousness is almost all
gone,"—Mrs. V, Lang.
Vivol is a delicious compound of
Cod liver peptone, iron, etc, Nervous,
easily tired, anomic people are sur-
prised how Vinol gives new pep,
sound, sleep and a 1.31E appetite, The
very first bottle often adds several
pounds weight to thin children or ad-
ults, Tastes delicious. McKibbon's
Drug Store,
NEPTUNE IN MODERN GARB VIEWS QUEBEC
5!
Now that Shakespearean produc-
tions are staged in plus fours,
evening clothes and khaki there
does not appearto,be any solid ob-
jection against Father Neptune
discarding his traditional garb of
'seaweed in favor of seaboots and
sailor togs, and the Canadian
National Railways • photographer
recently found the son of Saturn.
and Ops gracefully lounging in
Quebec City as depicted above. It
will be noted that the, old gentle-
man retains trident and helm but
has adopted a modern steering
wheel in place of horse and dolphin.
This particular effigy may be
found on Mountain Hill and.
appears to replace one which up to
1860 had place of honor over the
entrance to the "Old Neptune
Inn" then a noted Coffee house in
St. Peter Street frequented by
sea -faring men. Time was when.
carved, wooden figures frequently
marked hostelries and commercial
establishments in Quebec and
Montreal but only a scant feels
have withstood the advancing
years.
II IIMYI IIfIU IMll l llpl pAlI11 II limp ioim
NimIIItNItleitlmIhmpiMlllIMICIIANImaiif1muMQiMitinliilitlif:NEl9lmilp
01 HAPPY
I.
I• s the June ride
OR
Who gets her invitations and announce:,
incnts at the Advance -Times Office, Not I.
only is our stock the very latest, ibut the
W'O1'ktnanship s un r -
� surpassed important
tthese are, and1J0i tank as �
part:cullarly so in so eventful
an affair, there is a. confidence Clgx%Ce of seC1'eG
that every bride Willa pre I d
he ver: pleasedl�.p c ate..'�V•e should
y to submit samples of work. iti
i d nce° i pu rn .
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