Loading...
The Wingham Advance Times, 1929-10-17, Page 2WINGHAM ADVANCE -TIMES Hisao E orgy Usy Stephenson 318, L. Ludwig 300, H. Brawley 290, M. Fry 255, M, Mason 264, S. Scott 259, H. Skelding :258, L, Haller 219, R. Saint 217, M, El- liott 208. A, L. Posliff, Principal. Junior IV Total 500. Tonors• 375. E. Coutts 448, C. Nortrop..438, T. Reid 438, 1,, Browne 431, E. Patter- son 430, G, Robertson 429, D. Bu- chanan 420, L. Deyell 409, D. For- sythe 409, V, Carter 403, F. Currie 385, M. Fraser 383, G. Mason 380, J. Preston 379, C. Stewart 378, D. Hutchison 361, P. Deyell 354, E. Fothergill 347, F. Collar' 341., N. Me - Evers 333, L. Clark 320, L, : Bok 315, M. Brown 308, P. Lecliet 287, A. Stone 282, 'H. Tinley 256, B. Mundy 243, B. H; Reynolds, Teacher. Senior III Total 600. Honors 450. Pass 360. R. Mitchell 531, 33. Hamilton 526, C. Wellwood 511, J. Zurbrigg 504, E Webb 502, I. Habkirk 494, D. Parker 489, W, Carr 487, M. Wilson 485, E. Fields 484, H. Burgess 482, B. Brown, 479, R,Howson 478, E. Schaffter 476 N. Blatchford 469, D. Rich 467, C. Chittick 465, R. Hammond 464, G. King 463, H, Miller 462, B. Mundy 445, G. Brackenbury 441, E. Finley 41,6, W. Small 407, J. McDonald 383, N. Cruikshank 360, S. Carter 317. WINGHAM PUBLIC SCHOOL REPORT FOR THE MONTH OF SEPTEMBER Senior IV . Field 445, A, Chittick 442, G. King Total 600. Honors 450. Pass 360. 415, G. Brackenbury 413, M. Reid 411, J. Buchanan 493, C. McKay 483,R. Hutton 408, V. Cantelon 373, L. M.Mitchell 474, A. Reid 454, M. Hawkins 355, W. Henderson 345, E. 1 UTUAL Endowments are for men, women and children. They may be purchased to become due at any age and, if desired, r,ettlement may be made in the form of monthly income. They comb -hie absolute se- curity. with. ,good investment returns.. Any Mutual Life representative will be glad to advise you. Or write this o'r ce direct. 3-A Vra erl9 W. T. Booth, District Agent, Wingham. Wm. Webstler, Agent; R. R. 2, Lucknow. R .Id. ,Martin, Agent, Ripley, Ont. DOMINIONd 11 uranCe The Tire Sensation of 1929 Frankly, we can't quite see how so much tire quality can be made to sell at the price asked for the new Endurance. It is a wonderful tire- made of the right stuff and plenty of it -and backed by ]Dominion i ubbcr Company. A keen buyer will get his money's worth in "En- durance." Come irt and find �maeo.ta DOMINION TIRE DEPOT 4 IL it, Carson and Son C. J. Farquharson, Teacher. Junior III Total 350. Honors 263. Pass'210. THE SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON Emma; Krohn 323, Lloyd Ellacott 319, Stanley Henderson 309, Irene, Mellor 307, Velma Stoakley 303, Lor- raine Carter 297, Zora Cameron 293, Marvin Smith 283, Laura Campbell 281, Luetta Bok 279, Thora Davison 278, Billie Lepard 278, Winnifred Mc - Nevin 275, Billie Davidson 274, Stew- art Forsythe 27* Helen Groves 271, George Carr 270,: Edith Campbell 269, Albert Campbell 267, Alicia Wilson 265, Norma Groves 264, John Lamb 256, John Bunn 252, Hazel Hawkins 245. Irene Clarke 244, Beatrice For- sythe 241, Wornuld Finley 237, Ray- mond Carter 232, Betty. Collar 228, James Durnin 225, John Currie 215, James Broome 213, Herman Ken- nedy 85. E. Hetherington, Teacher. Senior II Total 450. Honors 338. Pass 270. Mary J. Preston 397, Verne Walk- er 387, Jean Cruickshank 372, Edith Mundy 370, Evelyn Gamble 360, Irene Chittick 360, Doris Armitage 356, Hazel Lediet 353, Muriel Williams 329, Irene Fitt 328, Harry Posliff 327, Irlma Harrison 324, Harold Parker 320, Geoffrey Hattersley 317, Jimmie Lee 317, Bobby Rae 317, Lloyd Dark 316, Marjorie Forsythe 311,' Clarence Cantelon 308, Isabel Lamb 301, Ev- elyn Campbell 296, Marie Hopper 291, Jean Mellor 289, Alice Dore 282, Lillian Fuller 278, Edward Finley 271, Earl Kennedy 263, Bert Van- sickle. 258, Harry Ross 208, Evelyn Carter 191, Joe Nawash 188. M. Roberts,on, Teacher. Junior II ' Total 520. Honors 390. Pass 312. Lillian Howard 484, Patricia Park- er 483, Scott Reid 476, Charlie Well- wood 460, Mary Thompson 456, Ruth Hamilton 441, Russel Zurbrigg 437, Doris Fitt 426, George Boyle 423, Peggy Peacock 422, Charlie Krohn 418, Betty Rae 411, Margaret Marsh 409, Evelyn Edgar 405, Jean Thomp- son 403, Mary Elizabeth McKibbon 396, Robert Casemore 394, Lloyd Hutton 387 Eilenene Curtis 384, Billie Groves 379, Carl Bondi 377, Harold Ross 374, Allen Small 361; Charlie Ross 360, Adelene Vansickle 358, Kathryn Patterson 354, Charlie Bas- kerville 353, Harold Stephenson 350, Billie Kennedy 335, Edythe Campbell 329, Jimmie Mortimer 312, Kathleen Saint 264, Mabel Fothergill 239, Al- vin Lediet 214, Frank Angus 196, Gordon Helm 173, Joe Wilson 153, Jimmie Kennedy 115. B. Joynt, Teacher. First Book Total 390„ Honors 292. Pass 156. Noreen Benedict 372, Bill Burgman 368, Marion Templeman 365, Marg- aret Homuth 361, Kenneth Jackson 358, Reba Marshall 353, Hilda Brown 343, Francis Lockridge 343, Trevor Davison 341, Kenneth Johnson 339, Gertrude Finley 337, Nora Finley 336, James' Schaffter 335, Betty Lloyd 332, Mac Habkirk 325, Jack Fraser 393, BillSturdy819, Helen Smith 317, Betty Saint 311, Bertha Casemore 310, l ioel Stephenson ,810, John Lee 305, Jeanne Van Norman 299, Arnold Stoakley 294, Fenton Barnes185, Vir- ginia Currie 284, Harold Cantelon 279, Donald Adams 274, Louise Dore 265, Biill. Forsythe 242,'Chester'Catzmp- Camp- bell 229. . P. ,Johns, Teaaeber, Primary Class A -Total 100. Honors 75. Pass 60. Florence Finley 83, Bill Harris 83, Pill Smith 83, Dorothy' Mellor 82, John Wilson 77, Bill Seddon 77, Mab- el Campbell 76, Carl Vanner 71, Reg- gie Collar 67, Helen Patterson 4'7, Louise Thompsoh 48. Class )3. --Total. 50. Honors 38. Pass 80. Helen Hammond 49, Agnes Sell 49, Hens bothered with Lice are too busy to lay Eggs - Kin the Liee with Sold by all dealers Write ForPratt'a•PoultryBoolc-Fred. PRATT FOOD CO., of Canada, Ltd 328 Curlew Ave., Toronto 8. Ont. Kenneth Crawford 49, Billy Scott 49, Laura Collar, 49, Marguerite Ingham 48, Velma Ohm 48,. Ronald Lee 47, Francis Robinson. 47, Geor- ge Johnson, 47, Donald Fitt 47, Betty Groves 47, Norman Fry 46, Junior Nivins 45, Elmer Deyell 45, Harry Montgomery 44, Frances Mc- Fail 44, Louise Lloyd 42, Betty Thompson 41, Billy McNevin 36, jack Gorbutt 35, Margaret Finley 35, Fran- ces Durnin 33, Eva Lediet 28, Carroll Casemore 28, Harold Hutton 27, Jack Carter 23. A. a. Willianmson, Teacher. 45211.041131, LESSON III. -October ` 20 Useful Work a Christian Duty. - Genesis 2:15; Exodus 20:9; Nehemi- ah 6:3; John. 5:17; 9:4. Golden Text -If any will not work, neither let him eat.-Thess. 3:10. THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING. Time and Place. -Ten Command- ments given to Moses on Mt. Sinai, B.C. 1499 (Beecher). Nehemiah re- builds the wall of Jerusalem, B.C. 444. Christ heals at the pool of Bethseda, A. D. 28. Christ heals in Jerusalem the man born blind, A.D. 29. Paul's address to the Ephesian, elders, at Miletus, A.D. 57. WORK ORDAINED BY GOD "And Jehovah God took the man, and put him into the garden of Eden to dress it and keep it" -"The man" was the first man, Adam, the father of the human race. The garden of Eden was probably situated about the head. of the Persian Gulf, or southern Mesopotamia, once an ex- ceedingly fertile and lovely region. The Bible shows us the first man introduced at once to labor, and giv- en a task which he must perform; but it 'was before the fall, it was a joyful task, and was performed for a God who was loved and adored. It was work under ideal conditions, and such work is :pure happiness. That is the kind of labor which God ordained and intended man to ac- complish. SIX DAYS FOR LABOR "Six days shalt thou labor, and do all thy work." -It is often forgotten that the Fourth Commandment is an ordinanceof labor as well as an or- dinance of rest. Until there' is labor there cannot be rest, in any true sense of the word. PERSEVERING LABOR "And I sent messengers unto them saying, I am doing a great work, so that I cannot come down; why should the work cease, whilst I leave it, and come down to you?" -In the lesson for September 8 we learned about the trouble Nehemiah had with the Samaritans while he was rebuild in;; the wall of Jerusalem. Angered because they were not allowed to share in the restoration of the tem- ple and of - the city walls, their lead- ers, eaders,' Sanballat, Tobiah, and Geshem, attempted in every way to intimidate Nehemiah and hinder the work. One of their moves was to invite Nehem- iah to a conference in some village away from Jerusalem, but Nehemiah was far too shrewd to put himself in their power. His reply, quoted above, was repeated four times, as they persisted in their invitation. It was ..a wise response, containing a lesson which every worker may well take to heart.'' THE DIVINE EXAMPLES OF TOIL i " But Jesus answered them, My Father worketheven until now, and I work."- Jesus had just healed the sick man at the Pool of Bethseda in Jerusalem, and when the Jews perse- cuted him ersecuted.him because he had worked. this blessed miracle on the Sabbath, our Lord made the reply given above, thus angering the Jews because ,He called God His Father, "marking him- self equal with God." PRESSING Tun WORK "We must work the works of him that sent me while it is day: the night cometh; when no man can work." -Another of Christ's :sayings. was worktinec- -etri c o s about spoken! tion with'a miracle of healing work- ed on the Sabbath, this time the great marvel of giving 1g sight to a man bora blind, with the result that the Pharisees excommunicated the once blind mart. Our Lord knew what risks He was running In of- fending the Pharisees by healing the sick on the Sabbath, .but He knew' also the appaling misery of the world and how short was the time in which He could relieve the world's sorrows and win sinners to their God. He was always eager to "redeem the time because the days were . evil". (Eph, 5:16). INDEPENDENT WORK Thursday, October" 17th, 1929' Paul had his longest pastorate, in the great city of Ephesus, in Asia Minor, where he stayed perhaps for nearly three years, "I coveted no man's silver, or gold,. or apparel," -Paul was too absorb- ed in his. great work towaste any time in greed, "Ye .yourselves know that these hands ministered unto my ,necessit- ies, and to them that were with me." -The wise Jewish custom required that every Jewish lad should be taught a trade, and Paul's was the art, so useful then, of making tents, coarse cloth for the purpose being made in his native Tarsus. This was the business which enabled the ap- ostle to postle'to be self-supporting, and also, in large part, to support his assist- ants. "In all things. I gave yoti an ex- ample." -Paul's example of industry. was no small part of the glorious example he set. "That so laboring ye ought to help the weak." -One object of all worthy toil is to be self-supporting, and another is to aid those that are less able to work than we are. Toil that has no unselfish aim belittles rather than ennobles the worker. "And to remember the. words of the Lord Jesus, that He Himself said, It is more blessed to give than to receive." -This price- less quotation is the only addition the New Testament gives us to the words of Christ recorded in the four Gospels. EARNING ONE'S WAY "Now we commend you, brethren, in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ." -Paul knew that he had "the mind of Christ," and so he could say in His name what he might have hes- itated to say on his own authority. "That ye withdraw yourselves : from every brother that'walketh disorder- ly." -Some of the Christians, expect- ing the immediate second coming of Christ, refused to continue in their usual labor, holding that it was un- necessary in view of the coming end of the world, and meanly took ad- vantage of the church's liberality,. subsisting on the charity, of the less fanatical, and at the same time criti- cising these generous givers, and making trouble in many ways. "And not after the tradition which they received of us." -"The tradition" was the spoken instruction, as well as the written teachings of Paul's first let- ter to the Thessalonians. "For yourselves know how ye ought to imitate us." -They had no excuse, for Paul had been very ex- plicit in condemning these excesses. "For we behaved not ourselves dis- orderly among you." -A tremendous understatement, for the sake of em- phasis, since the idea of Paul's act- ing. "disorderly" was absurd. "Neither did we eat bread for nought at any man's hand." -"To eat bread" is to be maintained, support- ed, by another, Moffatt's transla- tion is very graphic: "We did not loaf in your midst, we did not take free meals from any one." "But in labor and travail, working night and day, that we might not burden any of you." -Tent -making, using coarse and heavy cloth, was hard and work, but it suited Paul's purpose because he could take it up at any time, and, work at it at night andin the inter- vals of his preaching and evangeliz- ing. "But to make ourselves an ensam- pie unto you, that ye should imitate us." -Paul was charged with divert- ing to his own use a part, at least, of the funds he collected for, the Jerusalem poor. His punctilious re- fusal of a salary was a sufficient re- ply to this slander. His, circumstan- ces were different from those of oth er Christian workers. "For even when we were With you." -Very early in Paul's ministry, at the outset of his work in Europe, "This we commanded you, If any will not work, neither let him eat." -"The form of the Greek implies in this case a positive refusal to labor: the man won't worlt; then it is God's law that he shall starve." "For we hear of some that walk among you disorderly, that work not at all, but are busybodies," -There is a play on words in the original Greek, as if Paul said, "They have no business except being busybod- ies," or 'They are only busy at be- ing busybodies:" "Satan finds some mischief still for idle hands to do." "blow them that are such we com- mandand exhort Lord in the Jesus ar Christ, that with quietness they work, and eat their own bread." -They have been eating other folks' bread, and they have been talking too much!. Paul urges and pleads on the ground 0 WALKER. STORES, LIMITED -- HANDLE -- `KNOWN LINES a { ° QUAIJTY' "Gordon" SI-iIRTS For MEN Guaranteed, as to fit and color. "Gordon" BLOUSES For Boys Save you Time and Money. "Gordon" SOCKS .For MEN Are attractive and 1pw priced. "Gordon" CAPS For MEN And Boys are most dependable. "Trans -Canada" OVERALLS Fit and wear as you want thein. "Lancaster" FINE U'WEAR Is comfortable for Men and Boys "York" FLEECED U'WEAR Is popular for. Men and Boys. "Walker Store" WORK SOCKS Wear longer for the price. "Puritan Maid" HOSIERY Is most exacting and low priced. "Little Nell" HOSIERY Best for all your children. "Manta" U'WEAR for Infants Is in a class by itself. "Gordon" WINTER U'WEAR Is meeting with popular favor. "Woods (Lavender Line)" LINGERIE Is absolutely the best out. "Comfort" WOOL GOODS For children, are most attractive "Gordon" QUALITY GLOVES In Kid, Suede Fabric, Silk. D. & A. CORSETS, Corsettes Are popular with most women. Try Us For These and'• Other Feature Lines Not Mentioned Quality Goods At Moderate P rices Is Our Motto We Invite Your Inspection At All Times You Are Privileged To Look Around In This Favorite Shopping Centre. Q 0 O 11 q O Walker Stores, Limited 0 0 O p 11 11 O of their relation to Jesus Christ and wheat and the tares. Paul knew of ' shameful depravity in the Corinth- ian church, and now he is compelled to set down the fact that the Eph- esian 'church contained, not only re- pentant thieves, but thieves who were still stealing. "But rather let With him labor, working w th hi s hands, the thing that is good," -He has been active inappropriating.the goods of others; now let him be equally active in doing gpod for the sake of others, He is first to make restitution, as Paul says elsewhere; and then, from what remains, he is to succor others. for His sake, that His name be not dishonored, and that His grace be recognized by diligence in work to please Him. THE OBJECT O -F LABOR We may well sum up our 'lesson with another stirring sentence by y St. Paul, from his circular letter to the Christians in Ephesus and the other churches in Asia Minor. "Let him that stole steal no more. -Tie early churches were made up of people just out of heathenism, and those who, had led them had frequent occasion to recall Christ's ,parable of the 111111111x111/11111111®I 11■III/tn1111 11■III ■I I Iil111111111r111 111111111®n • l l l ®III/I I111111111111 i111\1111.111®I 1111111 s i ' ! P ULTRY WANTE WANTEDI i LIVE OR DRESSED '__ A Highest Market Prices for your Cream and Eggs. ii V • A large shipment of Potatoes just arrived, we will I deliver to any part of the town. 1_ 1 I fli , ' ,s11ington Prodoce Co.,, Ltd. Phone 166 Win bairi• $ranch. �. g • anC�l 13r Wingham, ''VV'xarto*, TartC.lraod Valley Head Office, Harriston, la;.a - 1111 _. .. .. 111l111�111iu1l m ,Il�lll milimoI11M11111Mi11111n■IIIC�t11MIitiA11IsomuI I�11uIIMtI1M111Nr litialp '"I'°I