HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1923-11-15, Page 3!IT
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SUNDAY AFTERNOON
SOSO&
Look from the ephere of endless day;
0 God of mercy' and of might;
lin pity look on those who strayp
Benighted in thie lend of
In peopled vale, in lonely- glen,
In croWded niart, by stream or sea,
'How many of the sops of, rnen,
Hear not the message Sept' from
The!
Send forth Thy heralds, Lord ,to call
The thoughtless young, the harden-
ed old,
A wandering flock, and bring them all
To the Good Shepherd's peaceful
fold.
(W. C. Bryant).
PRAYER
0 God! Thou blessed, Thou pre -
Thee eternal Godhow zap it
be Thou art not to the Souls Thou
Iasi created the sweetest, the most
believed, the most .glad and blessed
joy, And rather than enjoy Thee
will the soul turn to the sad, dark,
polluting, deadly pleaseres and en-
joyment of this poor world, there to
find peace and joy! Move upon me,
d' quicken Thou me according to
y word, In Thy presence is full -
e, ef joy, and at Thy eight hand
• pleasures for evermore., Grant
nee to know the joy of the Lord that
it May be my strength Enrich me
with all spiritual blessings in Christ
Jesus. Amen.
•
S. S. LESSON FOR NOV. x8fire 1923
"Bui. Whethe saw the multitudes,
he evae moved with compassion, op
them, because they fainted, and were
scattered abroad, as sheep havieg no
shepherd,"
As Jess went abutAll their cities
and villages he had opportueity to
see how very lituneroes the inhabi-
tants were, God had promised Abra-
ham, that He would make of hien a
nation "great, mighty and populous;"
and even after all the levasions a,and
d.estructions that had come upon the
Jewish people by neighboring •nations
they were still ie Christ's day a num-
erous people. His heart went out to-
wards them, that great heart of PleY
for sinful men, that brought him from
heaven to earth and to the Croes:
He pitied those amongst them who
were physically sick, lame and blind,
but he was moved with compassion."
for all, because of their helpless con-
dition spiritually, beifig withont lead-
ers for their soul -life. "They were
scattered abroad, as sheep having no
shepherd." Jesus here quoted from
Kings 22;17 "I eaw all Israel scat-
tered upon the hills, as a sheep that
have not a shepherd"
Verse 37 -The Plentiful Harvest but
few reapers -
"Then saith he unto his disciples,
"The harvest truly is plenteous, but
the reapers are few."
The Pharisees were more concern-
ed about forms and ceremonies than
about spiritual truths, so that the
people were weak spiritually, there-
fore they were going astray, and Je-
sus compared them to sheep, for, no
creature is more helpless and less
able to find the way home than a lost
sheep needing the care of a shepherd.
The teachers ' the Jews had at this
time Jesus said were not shepherds,
and so he points out to his disciples
how great the work, in that lies be-
fore them. The Jews thronged the
synagogues, forsaking not the assem-
bling of themselves together, though
the spiritual bread 'with which they
were fed was scant and poor.
Verse 38 -Prayer -The Duty of the
Disciples
"Pray, ye, therefore, the Lord of
the harvest. that he will send forth
laborers into his harvest." '
'•The disciples were being prepared
for laborers hi the master's vineyard,
and so Jesus told: them they them-
selves must pray to the Lord of the
Lesson Title -Our Lord Jesus a
Mis
Lesson Passage -Matt. 9:35-38;
Luke 8:5-3; John 3:16:47.
Golden Text -John 316.
Verse es --Variety in Mission Work.
"And Jesus went, about all the ci-
• ties and villages teaching in their
synagogees, and preaching the gos-
pel of the, kingdom, and healing ev-
ery ..,sickftess,„and every decease a-
ong the people.")
caching, preaching, healing, were
the ordinary methods of work Jesus
vengaged in as he Went from- place to
place in Judea, .Samaria and Galilee
•&ping, the three years of his public
ministry. Following his example
the churhhes today, send oat teachersharvest that when the time would
to inStrtict the people in schools andi:coine when God would send them
colleges; evangelists to expound the :faith, they might be'readyand wil-
way ettf. life --the gospel of the king- nag as was Isaiah,:to say 'Here am
done as they itinerate from one cen- I, seed me." Ministers having been
tre to ,anther; and doctors to give ordained -to labor in the harvest field
hakng to the body, while at the should pray for recruits for the min -
same time they live and practise the istry that more work may be done.
•spirit of the Master. •Alt who love souls should pray for
Verseed e--Compassion-The True Imore laborers to be thrust forth into
issiOnarn Spirit ,j the great world-wide field of rnis-
. -
Itt
11
11.11.11
Stens,
Luke 8:1-3--Wornen Missiemttries
"And it came to pAss afterward,
that he went throughoet every city
and village, preaching and shewing
the glad ti4iigs of the killgelenn„. of
God; and the twelve were with him,
And certain wemen, which bad been
healed of evil spirits and infirmities,
Mary called Magdalene, out ef whom
went seven deeile• And Joanna, the
wife of Chuza, Herod's steward, and
Susanna, and many others, which
ministered unto him of their sub-
stance."
As Jesus accompanied by his
twelve disciples went throughout ev-
ery city and village preaching And
working miracles and healing the
widened circle to admit womee as his -
daily companions and helpers. They
had been ministered to by Min. He
had been to them a true physician and
it was now their great joy to serve
him in the one way open to them -
they gave of their substance to supply
the daily bread of the itinerant prach-
er and his dieciples.
John 3:16 -17 -The Essence of the
Gospel
"For God so loved the world, that
he gave his only begotten Son, that
whosoever believeth in him shordd
not perish, but have everlasting life.
For God. sent not his Son into the
world to condemn the world, but that
the world through him might be sa,v-
In the course of a conversation be-
tween Jesus and Nicodemus, a master
of Israel, that which Timothy desig-
nated as "The Faithful Saying" was
uttered. Jesus in his discourse
spoke of saying as opposed to perish-
ing, of justifying as opposed to con-
demning, and said "love" was what
stood between in both cases. Won-
derful love is seen when one man
gives his life in tlie attempt to save
another life. "Greater love hath no
man than this, that a man lay down
his life for his • friends." but the gos-
pel mystery of love is seen in that
"God so loved the world that he gave
his only begotten Son". It was
pre -meditated love: "But God corn-
! mendeth his love towards us, in thet.
!while we vvere yet sinners, Christ
' died for us" (Rom-s:e). I-Iim, being
' delivered by the 'determinate counsel
land foieknowledge of God,- ye have
taken, and by wicked hands have .cru-
cified and slain" (Acts 2.23). It was
all-embraeing love. "And he is the
propitiation for out sins; and not for
us .only, but also for the sips of the
whole world" (t John 2:2).
• If love is the great gospel -mystery
to believe is the great gospel -duty
"for there is reene !ether "name tinder
heaven given among men, whereby
we must be saved" (Acts 4:12). "He
that believeth on him is net condemn-
,
oya kLleurgt: Crosses Ontario
te4titaft-
••:,•••
eh„s::::teenteWells. end leer
tir
-
-Aliallit Bon. David Uoyd George at4 he appemed ben (1) -One tor the compartmenta osi the Lloyd George Special'
apealtin,g from tie platform of the Caltaditro r'acific train. train.
ono-frhc engine that drew Lloyd George WISS the litt word in ()—Mw. Lloyd George speaks to the eltlir.otia of Choki:tn.
moolimmteral oonstruetion,
alitughter Moysaa J. Scully, Go...oral igiai.agor af Canadiaia Pacific Eaatora Lituaio and ozher
or'.1%is party, Lloyd George admire,, tile panning scenery.
ineura a little clearing -at the, side of ,the railway
track In the 'heart of North Ontario, All about
axe thO'hilly:foreets of Jacket:sine,' hemlock and flaming
7e110w poplar.''' -A. brilliant "autumn elm ftelke • on lake'
-and forest and»roekY elift aud, in the eentre) is a 'little
patch 'oie cleared ground .stirr,Ounding a tiny log CO/
44)..'t is doer •a, wenian and three or four sttudy children,
'axe grOliPed. They are listening., From behind the bins
again ,Comes the' exultant .whistle of a locomotive, and
• a few mentents the train sweeps into view, It flashes
Pea tiraiv.tt. he. in engine •'of the latest type such as
engintere ,talk or ' Width jog, and *eluding 'six plenn-
oelore,d tootle/en • deed- build frOne end to end. Their
Iln,thished side O. retied- the warm oultithan siin. • Bright
• begegs .trineininge and poliehed Windo*S .glisten ,the
train' sweeps, along .its narrow Path *Wards the Wend,
Sr thing a eetrido'and, peneer. • e: • . • •
The•childeeas etanding beakle the log eabin are, silent;
:.takeh holds a tiny lateg,:thelUartleii to the train a 'message
oflitieetbig, ,Ptttid'Lleyti;George ia, pawing by. .; The
little *olefin:ion origin, the war-tiine. 'Prime
,.,,Atieneter Of leiliptefial'Iliftafif is on'his' Way feemoT,oronto
taVinnineg and ,alinleng. the tnilroad the peoPle COnite,,
down to see Itiee peas. , • ,
, • It Was a Weliderfal trip. Heralded by, . 'herreleeeen
, front pages and yearn i,ef ,Power4,..tbe 'led
hell: a world; hi ivier, moved aercias Oder*, through
scene, attee :sten& Meek.. as :this Width: had 'been. ''altetiehael
sitheinre,• , '
°`.`Virhat eotatitree, what a Wonderful ootintleglei"., It
wad telibrd Goole0 W'he Opelte, -Seated in OM ..dratritti
robin, Of the•priletteeeet end of the teeln'he'laied
,eifrat ,the eetteittleenlakee, ned endless, forelita. that flew
,:Ahelit' him *ere one rif two offthialit' ofe the
rttillIder that eartted. on his Wite, "Old' .u/1411110.
'number Of news$,Der repreeentethien tor Velient a;tiedine
inedietion wee ProVided on the ire*, It Won, Aiwte
:of the morning interview, *heti the Press Men:tante ed
to aek, hint apieetione "hetieleteet the,nieveS at the awy
Witileh had tiomo tohtheetrain• by -emit° ,rient :Parts
et the ',WOrld; but ineetle from Buro:Pee and Ala etery
otietitlen,:eahte the ,Lieed il:Porge .anower, quick, and ,th
the pedistseaOti event' When the finestien Wiis
,iittle•Peeetiiistiateet Oew: Mid -then it, might be, The-, tem
eit'AetlefieK: vt'eftf 'reYelttet. t,lte lgstles of
the day,: The twenty odd newspaper people from Great
Britain, 'United States and .Cianada -were the pick Of
".the game!" they , and the moving •pieture men; the '
'maim's:paper 'reporters of: the camera, were •a
„crowd, and millions- of petiole had front them 'a. daily
report of what Lloyd George said, did and looked like,
during his elying, drip over the Canadian:: PaCifie. line. ,
'it took, a lot of eccommodation to care for these
people. ,The Whole train was :the Jost eiroed, in' eon-
struetiou, and no finer train. aver moved. .over. steel
rails. It was a credit to ,Canadian wOrkmanShip, as Is
exernilified at the Canadian Pacific Angus,. Shops at
Idonteeai Where it was 'Milt, and liendreds ef .thousands •
of Canadiana admired it When it stood at the Toronto
Exlilleitioti • tleig year for that ptirpose. ^ •
The..hiiegago. car,, like. all the rest was :of steel. The
dining ettr nvae eommand of "Ilidemle" Watson,: the ..
matt who looked atter the •Peinee of MOO when .
be Made his eiret :trip neroire'Canada. . There was az
all steel stanclerd• eh:leper and 'teed of the teineollteart-.
Anent. cars .that are hecoraing 'More and. More nonular,
as they are better knoWn. ' Behind theim Orede 'Lloyd;
t4eOrge'S"p,riAiate car, Beth -Amerlatin tad • .tritisai
eorreSpondents bad seen"aothing heifer '
In some reandets 'they ...haert0t„a60..th6it.e!giiial end;
they eseree leiid in their Pritiada.` When '`they; Were told
it was rega*r equiPment aii"ddiale Olathe '"Trina-,
Dania 'Lleaid 'cleprge
end ne 16'1A Appreelittitlte'dhan' Was. '
their fainonflehlieband and father,' They Went thretigi '
th"5 Odexamined and the Ifiteliee of 'the.
'dining 'car Vine Of the ilciAt; • eekiietia3 .inteienet to the'
•
asldoa .After havin•g seen • thbetoMfeet •of• the' 'cotheiaft=
Meet care, Mime Megan 'Opropriated •:ohe of 'the letna--
,pArtitaenth.foi her own natio At.' the' ceneteafen be the
ti1it Mr..1;10y4 aeerae '000640.H.hts ;adoeiretien an
gratitude t� the CatiailitedePaelltie'Breilway for the 'Way
he and Ma family' lied been :taken: care of While.pasaln
eyere the a1,1•' • •
• "A:4' far" Wegt as Port
Manager Canadian 'Patifie lines MMpanied :tile train,
while D. 0. ColeMent, Vida-Prealdiniti .14refirtetti. Lines
took 'charge. ilrein there' eh. 'itheAfirdlian nitarigenients
Wert) taken tire elf,`,bir, Harry the:, ()OinhatIrs: -
10'ress ileprekentatlfie
nes
'HAM A»VANVIt
FIVEYEARS'
AGONYENDED
Neu He Tookifruit-a.tives"
For Rheumatism
The Medicine Made From Fruit
There' can be no doubt • that
"Fruit-a-tivee" is tile long sought
remedy for Rheumatism and 1,eim-
Ingo. From all over Canada come
lettets testifying to this foot,
Mr. John E. Guilderson, f Farra-
bono N.S. writes: suffered badly
with Rheumatism for five years -
tried differentinedloines -was treated
by doctors in Amherst -and here at
home --a-' but the Rheumatism came
back.
In 1016, I sisw au edvereisement for
"Fruit -a -dives" and took a 'box and
got relief, so I took "them for about
monthe and the Rhenniatism was,
ei gone and I have never felt it since",
110e. a beix„' 6 for $2:50; trial size 25e.
FIIMSKS71,
flortb of
iftvostl)ree
y Bertrand W. Sinelair
Continoed from last week
easeaseneeewo
ro-Oirffice ea'f0111/511hiteFe
rbee:gliglin:' cf11,!i: °X11-t's il'veet;tt-
tip, 'fur thicker • and softer titan in»
pile of any eerpet, ever fabrieatee
men, Ail around the wells rap eiteleeS
ltd witie hooks. A., guitar stood le
one core‘er, a 'intindelin to another.
.140ept for the41ust tea:- 1: a 61 ;,,,,•1 al,
teed lightly in ite owner's abeeigo, toe
place: was as neat and clean siS if the
houeernied /tad but.gone over it. Hazel
shregged her shoulders. Riatriog Bill
Wagataff became, if anything, more of
An enigma than ever, in the light of
Ly.r.devediteowlilip4nga,,,eltS311dfin,wtrryeeo.rldieceettebdimth,atist:51Ctiarve4, b4404:
,
IfiY149PAIlft,
eliAPTilen n-Tbeeetory opena * ,
is engaged, to Jack 13arrow;,' enellnie rein • w ff
raw hie wet Mater e'elothing, boy
town 'et Granville, ontarte, where esese
rezeiNeines.employeinae.,e stenogrephgr: nnonen, en nig n!neeandonin
•
route ,emee, eierringtoif eel& limete , 2'7,w140441:°:,:erriblteri,o, no:::::11;1:7*,4C:Ity,rti:°11;e2"nroetl'W::earg4., °Ittalidi*
. .
the
estate' ageint. arid the wedemg daY" dmasse. dwelt foggetn•:Mee kt.g a
WhIie hene sunday'th'eg
moot Air. Bnele Heser,e eyOnloYer, WAG for. celd, ly, 'that I world
the 'first' time seems :to ,neties her
tractlyenefai. Shortly afterward, at his re-'
+1IrrilIntOonift)417lild'hOlenit regarding' her
prToSie marriage, -Whiek Haxe,1' .declinee,
th adjoining room. "Out of this he-
Jeavos ber enialfloY,InPtit• • „ neeseneie ,enineneen.eraggiree a amen
tweet; ehe becoMes .PriYate,
raarlph;fterih:fat,eretotrtinil; sinceonnetl: 14;;;.,311:31.1;e112,XI,,, 7,1041 his ()noels:101e, ' Then ke wont lot°.
Warnirig tier he „woul make her perry for
At dealers 'or' from Fruit-adavee I tractile/41g 4teamertrunk, Rile opened it, got down
vved over the con-
HAPTER malr.eiran' effort, .bi on bit; kneere Pe
Lind:bad Ottevia; Ont. .
. gift of flowers, to cornproptise Hazel,
•
•I the, Mill‘la , her friends. 'phe, ,reforns,
themy as
:' 'The next 'daursii th.rfrWa fr9n1
his horse arid fatally liur,t, He sende• fee
Hazel, who T'efuses; to ,fiee, birn before, he
dies. Three days afterwardi it is an-
nounced that ha.left a legacy of $5,000 to
Hazel, "in reparation for any wrong 1
may hay& done,ber..." Hazel,.recognizes
once what constrdation will be ,,put, upon
the 'words.' Bush had his revenge.
. ,
ed; but he that belieeeth not is con-
demned already, because he bath, not
believed in,the name of the only be-
gotten Son •of God" (John - 3:18).
Go labor on; spend ad be spent,
Thy joy to do the Father's will;
.It is the way the Master went;
,Should. not the servant tread, it
still? ,
(Horatius Boner).
WORLD MISSIONS
Preaching, teaching . and healhig
occupied our Lord's time during the
days of his public ministry; and these
three types of activity continue to
occupy the energies of his servants
on the mission field. Not only is the
need felt for work along these differ -
en lines, but we also see that in
these ways IN r•nn do the eseeeteet
good to the greatest number. Some
persons are reached in one way, Oth-
ers in another way., And so day, by
day in every way -the Kingdom is
being extended.'
Some :missionaries do not :care to
write for publication accounts of the
work they , have been, doing. , So we
have to content ourselves:with a .few
facts and figures gleaned from their
letters and conversation, which will
give us SOrOe idea of -their work.
The man we are telling onethis- time
is Dr. MacKenzie. During a . two
weeks' tour in:the eastern section of
his field lie examined over a'hundred
and thirty persons, candidates for
either recording or baptism. 'There
were fully four hundred persons pre=
sent at communion service in the
:C•HAPTBetetel--eaee Barrow, in a fit
or jealous rage, demands from Hazel an
expianation of Bush's action. Hazel's pride
is hurt, and. ahe „refuges. ' The engage--
,
men*Ia-broken. and creternainee.tO
.1flave•, Grenville.' She. sees, ars . advertise-
' ment' for a school ' teacher at Cariboo ,
Meadows, ,British Columbia. and !secures
the situation..
ce.eArofe Iv-et:armee meadows is in
a ,w1.111 'part 'of Britlsb colt:meta and Ea-
zel, shortie after ber arrive!, loses her
way while., walking in the woods. • she
wandere„ until ,night, when, , attracted, by
the light' of eampilre„ she" turris to it,
hoping 'to find' somebody 'Who will guide
her ,horse. At the fire ;she recognizesa
character' known to Cariboo Meadows as
"Roaring elm Wagstaff," who had seen
"-her • at ..„ -her'„ he.i:roine:' house there. He
promjSes tothe.take,,,her home in the niorro
inighbfr-. WW:ooderliePed .61 "'end' '. .the
ngt•
CHAR'THR V, -They, start , next' dal,
liazeissneeeeeeS for Carthoolideadows, but •
,Wagstaff finally admits, he1 taking her
to his 'Cabin' in the mountainRe es
'Bpectitil •• and :eonalderate. ' And Hazel,
though.protesting bv1fgnantly is heiliclass
and bite to -accompany him.
' has
. But she' wouldnot takeerp the end-
elaxal Saw Tt the errunk WaMiled
With Vifrnix 'Garments.- •
-gels against -Min, would not again 'to, oan,
-countenance' Or Condone:Ms' 'otrOiser'hY *tents, • Hazel, looking ver her shoul-
discussing it from any angle, Whateo-,' der, save that the tounk, was filled with
'ever:: And. she was More determined eeenotioe' einennefen and sea, eeaseeo.
.to allownodegree a friendliness, even Retie perepae, Bill einann en
hi conversationebecinse she hecofle enarked,.
'nixed the masterful quality ` Of -the "it loedni me, as if you could
yoniself ''CoMpletely right there."
„111,an.'PI don't knew '-that I care to decki
'After a laps* -of AI/ea:they dropped nayeelf in another:, women% e finery, •
into another; valley, 'and 'faced" west- thank yon," he retegned,peryereely.',
''."NOw, See here,", Roaring' Bill turned
reproachfully; "see here--" ' •
He grinned to himself then, and went
„again into. the -other room, returning
•with a 'small equaie mirror. He plant-
- ed hineself squarely in front; cof - her,
. mid held up the glass. 'Hazel took one
, look at her refleeeion, and she could
, have etruck .Beating Bill for' his au-
dacity. .She had not realized • what
an altogether disreputable appearance
a normally good-looking young woman
could acquire in • two weeks on the
trail, with no toilet accessories'. and
only the clothes on her 'back. °She
.tried to snatch the mirror from him,
but Bill eluded her reach, and laid the
glass ou the table.
;
"You'll feel a Whale let better able to
cope, With the situation,' he tired her
smilingly, "when you get soine decent
clothes on and yeur hair fixed.. That's
a wo'man. And yoe,don't need be feel
,e1.110.allliQh a twilit these things. rPhiq
trunk's got a history, let Inc tell you.
A . hunch of simon-pure tenderfeet
strayed into the aloe:Italia west or
here a couple of summers ago. Tbere
Were two Ivoniefi in the bunch. The
youngesteone, who was abutyour age
and size, must have had more than
her share of vanity. I guess she ilg-
tired" on charming the bear and the
moose, or the .elinple aborigines who
dwell, in this neck of the woods.. Any-
how, 'she had all kinds of unnecess.ney
fixings' along, ',that .trunkful of stuff
in the, lot. You can imagine what a
nice time their guides had packing that
Ct),:fpan pki9.relz5ife3 in1:71l1;:•,r,1:n7d aabaneduocne
lei; of their, stuff, among other things
the steamer trunk. I lent them a hand,
and they.told me to help myself to the
stuff., SO 'T did Ottethey were Mit
of ffi6 edientry. That's' head you come
6o have a wnrilrobe all ready to yogi
hand. .Now, you'd be awful fooliell to
net like a mean and saftiolecaed female
person.' 'You're, not 'going to, are you ?"
he :wheedled. "Because -I went to
inake you eenifortable. What's the
use of getting on your dignity over a
llttic thing like elolltee?"
"X don't intend to," Hazel suddenly
changed front •make -.myself
comfortable• ae 1 can-partienlarly if
It will put you to trotible," •
• "Yetere bountl to perne, el?" he
grinned. "But it takes two to build n
fight, zied X positively refuse to fight
'with you."
• He dragged the trunk baelt Into the
gilit
(orlournotomr.tx,:ao.badIft,:riel.atisinceationeet beoagylgilingg:
Mich trips he Milde„piling ell his, things,
"Them!" he snid at last. "Tina end
of the houge belongs to you, linhaper-
son. New, get those wet thinge off be- .
fore okeu catch a colci, .0b,, Walt 0 mho
11:tH dleaPpeared into the idtehen end
Of ihe heuse, and came back with is
wilWlittsin and a pail of water. •
room Is novv ready, madam,
it pleaSe you." He bowed svith
meek dignity, and *cat back into the
febee,
, lineel heard him rattling pots end
. dishele whletling eleeerfully the -1,vidlo.
Siicclosed the dein', and blasted herself
• with' An, 'Wee:OUST of the tenderfoot
ladyee-trenk, In it elle found evere-
thingnettifill tor eondiete change, :Ina
open air at Don' Giing on ,the-7Lord s 1 ward to a Mountain range which Bill
Five days , were • 'spent with] told ,her was, 'the Rockies. The nett.
Pastor Hu .et Chang Tsun; but Dr. day a' snowattorin Struck them: It was
MacKenzie did not wait for cimeriun-
ion service the following Sunday,
when one hundred and eleven were
baptized. He went on to Wang En
Djwang, where about ninety mem-,
bers and adherents assembled, • and
deacons and an elder were installed.'
-Ilonan Messenger.
1924 Auto Plates
Even auto license plates have a new
style every year. While this yeax the
color combinations are black and
white in 1924 the color scheme vvill be
yellow and black. Background will
be the brightest color and the num-.
bers will be the somber black. They
are being made by St Thomas 'Metal
Sign Co. at a cost of 1.2 and one sixth
cents but what the public will have to
nan 4." nnt vni 'determine&
• THE DIFFERENCE
The girl behind the counter ,chews
Her geim in manner artful,
My cow chews cud the selfsame way
Except my cow looks thoughtful.
Prov. of Ontario Bonds
Sent al .98
Interest 5 per cent. half yearly
The Dominion Loan was absorb-
ed in a few days, but we still ac.
cept Victory Bonds in payment for
Ontario's.
,
Abner Cesens
Insurance and Real Estate
Wingham, Out
-
'
PrICO Advances
P -
g
P Last opportunity to
get a
4 ''PAGE HAND
MILKER"
at the old priee.
Act quickly ai 1 have 101
JaeHi. Curtitt, Pkge
6 3-440,
only a faw on hand.
.
Rant* 511, Win
FilliMIN11111110110111111M1**111111010
not 'enirtiettlarlydeold.. Bill errep,ped,
'her in'n; hating/ ama4ae ' coat, and plod-
, .• . , ,. .
'ded on. -Noonepessed,, and he, 'Made
no. 'atop. It anythhig, he *creased this.
Pea, , , • ,
,
Suddenly, in thole° iifterneon- they
stepped out of the:Raabe* into a little
clearing, in 'Whichthe blurred Ougine
of ,a• cabin 'showed .underthe,wide arms
of 'ft leillesi tree.
, .
The Melting mem •bad soaked
through 'the ,e6a*; her 'feet were wet:
With the clinging.fiakes, 'and the chill
et a lowering tensperature had set Ha-
nel shivering. • , . , • . . ,
,
. lEtostring: Bill halted at the door and
lifted-lier down from glillen hitek with-
out the formality :�f Wilting her leave.
He puRed the latchstring, and led her
In. Beside the rude stone fireplace
Wood and king -rink Wei* piled In readi-
ness for use. Bill kicked the AlOor,
a • bis kia s nd started
the fire. . In five minutes a great bletze
leaped and crackled into the . Wide
throat Of the china:leg. Then he piled
!
On marc wood, and tuned to her. -
."Tbis is the house that Jack built,"
be said, with a.. sober faee and a
twinkle la hie gray eyes. "This is the
man that lives in the house that Jack
built. .' And this." -lie , pointed mis-
chievously at her -"Is the woman,
who's going to love the man' that Rims
In 'the house that, jack built".
,"That'e a llei'' 'she fitiehed etormiln
.:4roug4 her . chattering teeth,
fri:e'll' see,'' he IhadVered cheer -
Collin "Get' UP here close' to the flee
antl take off those wet things While I
pnt away the horses:.
And with that he went out whistling.
----?-1, , '
.fil-lAPtEilt %,,i.. • ,
A Little Personal History,
Hazel d-isearded the wet, toat,' hied,
.. .
drawing a chair uP' to 'the fire,, took.,
off her sopping fentgeer and thaeted,
eel. bare feet at tbe. blaze. literelo,the
ing was also wet, end ,she wendered
pettlehly how hi the •Warid sae Was
Ignoeilnitgs tocioinbaenrag'beaciut,_1:thattdonityhotshqedghtlitry-
ttiol torn froea haeking through the
brush for a matteenf two weeks. Ac,••
cording to her standards, that wee
rolighing it with a vengeance. But
presently she gave. over thinking of hor
pl i gilt, The fire warrned iter,‘and, with
the chill gotte from tier body, she be-
eaneed rh.euelone 'Ile:ate' on her eur-
roendinged ' •
• l'bere Wei' furniture of a mort lin-
enewp to thee*, tables and ethers feel-e-
h:nett by. head With hat:Mite labor and,
nide elan, Massive hi structure,ergihol-
stared with -the Allis of wild beests
cominon to the region 13pori the',Wrille,
hung- ,pietures, 'dainty black -White
priritS, end 'ti veiiter eelor Or tWe. And
betWeen the,pictares Were nailed heads
. of mountain sheep and•gbat, the ant-
lers of deer anecaribOu., Above the
fireplace spread 'the huge elleeel borne
'of
is Moose, beArIng aerots, the prong
0 ehotgen .and liehing rods, The eenter
ef the fiOOP:--itSeit. as ,81,10, contd see,
(Si' illill,1,-Sttieethed legs-r--WaS lightened
with a' great hie& and, red and yellew
rine of ,curiknie Wertee, Covering' nil
hut, droppedon ee a
a varielY Of gam:cuts to Imor
1 ic bottom of the 1411(1)4 :
tl
at
kir
121::)':oll,ft):1b4:rt,11::*':1C"At6arr ll.ne°:1N'IdV'ill'::al"c.:431' :1:e1 -°"e;41:- DI''(T,.1, de' e 11'4
laid out the gray skirt and the itimortee •
For a dreamer Roaring Blii had
-Med itevide shelf, andel), it She: fotind
toilet set eomplete-leand eiairroe
• , , •
military brushes and sultrirv articles
Y�
..sotetbbpbiaigeacoa,,ekiyreie06vid:op2xwioran‘irott:cdlin:myS41otolthtt":rop:, i j:ititerpriee(,11,,toliooti,vigttle:ii'liritbieitoliwo;‘,4101,.:,0,04, ,
.utsbt be s .14itogroto .40eas- Jouid, thort., ,
the
0 i 67,1;:ii, ,,,, , es: , :tia4Ashouettlicdu.4tveen, ;arar.lflitec.:.;144;lx;t60,17t 14t.z?.E1,1140.11,.:,,.;t
dipped ea the kimono,' and Went iii
through a crack in the ' dot: '.1bieetiiie,
into the Inc 'corriees. • ' Presently' ',Ea
the:shade:dee, thmering a ruddy
tifirOlit '
. Bill reinellned bileY he the -10 ,
Onak,fell, Tnagleare• of a light abilW
he net on the mantel alD0** the Arson
hie', lititiale. Perhape with a a,t4cp et
came .in with a pair of caadlea*Whie4
, ,
"By jove I" he mid, looking 'down set
r. "You look ,good. enoticia to eat t
I• lstil'iinuiglet.lenvvdo,,aAtshnan,adSoeflttaitnllupynsp,"ebedtvv:Itoerh:s;uvvdc,Hbyevajelecio:nmfbittiviTe.ileoh.:464,1;;I:
The tablawas set Mareoier, le beg'
• sitrprise-and yet not 'so greatly t� bee
surprise, for she was .heginxiing te eide
pect almost anything from, thin parte
doileal young man-it.was spread vinth
linen, and the cutlery was. eilver, the:
dishes china, in contradietinction t
the tinware, of lile camp outfit.
-
As a .nook 'Boating Sill Wagstaff had
no cause to be ashamed of himself,' afst.,
Hazel enjoyed the meal, particeleier
Since she lied eaten.,,nothing since elic
in the morning. After a time, when tierr
appetite was Partially . Satisfied, she
took to glancing over : hie ' kitchen. '
There. seemed to be some adjunct or a :
kitchen missing. A fire, burned on a
. .
hearth similar to the one in the- living
,
od
is.hot:fire.oyeroom. But
therePot.s,tstoowasdabon
t iolieroinedge
Bills finished eating,' aid gesorted , .
eigarett.e metainal instead, of his pLps
. "Well, little person," the Said. at ,leisee
"what .ao, you think of this joint Of:
mine, anyway?"
'Tee just been , wondering," .she.
plied.:, "I don't see an' etoyee yet yeee,
hive food here that looks as If it were -
baked; and biscuits' :that Must heel%
been cooked in an oven.7,
. .
"Yon See na stOye for the geed, mad '
sufficient reason," 'he ref -breed, "that
you Can't peck a stove on a herse-aM11
'we're three hundred odd miles fir.one
the end, of ,any wagon, read. With,
Dutch oven or two -thee heavy,trAntit
Iron, thing you see :there -I, can guar-
antee.td cook almost anything you stits.
:cook.oia a stove. Anybody 'can if ills;
know how, Besides; I like things belt, -
ter this :Way: If 1 didn't, 1 supplest
-
rd have tt.stove7--and,raftybe a het -wan.
dentupplar, and modern plumbing. Age
It is, it affords rne a Sort of pridefeilts
satisfaction, which you may or mar
not be able to understand, that .thlio
cabin and everything in it Is the Work
of my hands -or, stuff I've packed' ha,
here with al1. serta of effort froin thee
outside. Maybe I'm a freak, But pre
proud of this piece. Barring' the In.
,
evitable loriesotneuess that conies now
and then, I tan be happier here 'than
any place I've ever-strack yet Thlia
country grows on one."
"Yes -on one",s nerves," Hazel re'
forted.
Bill smiled, and, rising, began to clear
away the dishes. Hazel resisted an
isa-
UiSC to help. She wou"d not 'work;
she would not lift lier finger fa mar
task, she reminded herself. He bad
put her in hes- present 'position, and lee
eenhi waet on ber: ,So she rested an
elbow on the table and watched
In the midst of his Work he stooped
suddenly.
"There's oceans of time to do tide,' ;
he observed, "I'm just a wee hit
nt.ilre.etrde, shorthr ask you. :Let'
n the s
camp in other roome It's a heaps
, • •
-Fie-put More wood on the kitebent
nee: and set,a -tot of water to beat.
Oat in the living room Hazel drew her
(-hair to one Side ee the hearth, 13111
eerawled on the„beaeskin robe with isra.
other Cigarette in his singers, °
uNinh he begall, after a long eifencen
'this country doesn't gel on tessece
eterves--uot if ono is is normal human,
being, You'll end that. 'When 1 firiut
came -up here thought so, too; it
seemed so big and empty and forbid -
Moir, 8sst the more 1 see of ft the bet-
ter It conmaree with the outer World,
where tha extremes of luxury inid want
are always in evidence. It began to
seem like home to me when I first
looked don into, this littli'hosin.
had a' partner then. I said to binet
'Heron; a dandy, line pinee, to Winter.'
So we wintered --in a leg aback Axtee,tt.
foot square that 'Silk and ,Setin end
Nigger IntVe for a stable now. 'When
summer came ny partner wanted tm
'love on, so I stayed -stayed- and Ino
grin to lroild for ,the next 1.11,1111er.. And
been: working at it ever since,
making little things like elmire ansi
tebles And shelVes; and fixing uts genie
heads whenever 1 got atli eXtrIt gond
ono. 'Ansi belaybe two or three thilee a
year I'd go one Got restiese, yote
know. I'm not really a hermit by na-
ture. Lord, the thinge I've packed in
hero front the outside! Boolts-Ibirea,
is whole pack tenth at Asheroft once to
bring in inst bookee they thought :S;
ens matey, 1 gueea. I've quit tide plooe:,
Once Or twice, but 1 alwaya cOrce book._
It's got that home feel that Ieartt fled,
Anywhere else. OnlY it htie lido -aye;
Itteked one itoportant boleti etuillileee
“b° Y°It etar
Ift. tie