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, „ •
• 'WALTON
• Death .of Mrs. Samuel Forbes.—
This community was Sadly surprised
laat FridaY to hear of the death of
Mrs. Samuel Forbes, a well known' and
esteemed residpnt. • 'While in
eolnparatively fair health, she took a
convulsion in the morning'and passed
away the same da"- The funeral was
delayed until Wednesday afternoon
in the expectation that her daughter,
Mrs. Gowland; of. Alberta, would
come. • Deceased's maiden name was
Abigail' Love, a daughter of Samuel
and Ural' Love, and her birthplace
Was fifth line, Morris township., She
was united in mdrriage. to her now
bereft partner 40 years ago and after
a long residence in McKillop township
be and her husband moved here to
enjoy a well earned rest. In:addition,
to the husband there is one son, Adin,
of MeKillop; andtwo daughtere. Thos. M. Williamson, Grey township,
•
and' Mrs. R. C. Gowland, Willesden,
• Alta., who will be accorded commpu-
sympathy' in thei,r unlooked for
bereavement. A daughter, Florence;
died atefifteen years of age and a
coincidence is that she was buried on '
the same date as the mother 25
years ago. The brothers of the de-
ceased are: Joseph, Walton; Sem and
William, Manitolpa; George, Washing-
ton, and John, Michigan, end the sis-
ters.are: Mrs. T. Davidson, McKillop;
Mrs. 'George Armstrong, Belgrave;
Mrs. W. Menarey, Washington; Mrs.
W. Dow; Hebbert, and Mrs.. T. Ririe-
connell, Michigan. Mrs. Forbes was
a fine spirited woman, energetie, in-
dustrious and generous with a gen-
iality that made friends fel- her
wherever she went. She was a faith-
ful member of the Methodist church
and her willing heart and ready hand
will be greatly missed in the home
and community. Funeral service
was conducted in the Methodist churce
and burial *lade in Brussels cemetery.
DIRECT CONNECTIONS TO OT-
TAWA VIA CANADIAN NA.-
TIONAL RAILWAYS
With the new train '.service .ar-
.rangenma* Which were put into ef-
'fect NW' -1131k on the lines -of the
Otinadian National Railways, improv-
ed service is being operated between
Seaforth, Toronto, Smith Palls and
'Ottawa. Tritine l9ave Seaforth . at
4.41 a.m. and 3.12 p.m., daily -except
Sunday, connecting at T,dichitie, with
',The Capital City" leaving Toronto;
eit!. 12.10 p.m. and the "Ottawa Ex-.
Press" leaving Toronto at 10.30 rent
ESturning excellent . con tion,,
Ilizade at Toronto willi iiigM titt
'leaving Ottawa 10.30 p.m. Train
leaving Toroetf,6„f0 am. andArrivea,
at' Seaforth'-'at '10:56 a.nt, dallf
eent , Sunday. •. 28934
'5,.
THANKFUL MOTHERS , )
•
ThorasitendS yel ribelhere
libis--ospeak ,with thankfulness con-
etning the use of Babette O*n.Tajs
. Once they hatZei uliteLtize
for their Mac ons they wbu
ji nothing else, The Tablets are
i nhira1-sfn Medi -dire "fief eettiff-
iounge t baby, being unienteed
tt r -±tAticitiestorlt.
*lnfu1 drugs. Concerning .them
rs. David McRobb, Divile, Seek.,
te:—"I have used Baby's Own Tab.
he -end' have- found'Union stitisfac.
torY I Would Without thein."
The Tablets are soldby irtedieine deal.
len or by im01 et 25 eenta a box from,
The Dr. Wilftrrisv-- Idedieine
(Broekville, Q4.
•
CAMPING GS41,1NDS FOR
MOTORISTS
• Preparations for the opening cere-
mon' of the' Bariff-Windermere motor
road over the Central Rockies are
being rapidly advanced and it is ex-
pected that the new motor camping
ground near Banff as well as the
1uiaantp'the read
ready 416th.iti Egoldi
Vgehfa*:{1111''4)9"„ s;ritaajeaUnreM3041.:'
Uan e, when coinp eted, will be one
ipfrtliatiest'eOoipped-in'the DeMbnion.
jt, will be lighted•hy electricity aid
miter eone the Banff aystein wiUbe
piped to the grounds. Celinary, lav-
atory and telephone conveniences will
be provided. A Caretaker will be in
charge throughout the season, and
the camp vin be subject to inspection
by the sanitary officer. In 'all there
will be about 250 lots for campers.
'DAVE YOU ANY OF
THESE SYMPTOMS?
• —
If You Have, Yet: Are in Need of
a Tonic Medicine.
•
Are you pale and weakreasily tired
_and out of breath on slight exertion?
Are you nervous? Is your sleep
disturked? • 190 you wake up in the
morning feeling as tired as wheri you
went to bed? Is your appetite poor,
your digestion weak, and de you have
Pains after 'eating? . ,
If you have any of these symptoms
you need a tonic, and in the realm of
medicine there is no better tonic than
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills which enrich
the blood, restore shattered nerves
add bring the glow of health to pale
cheeks. The value of Dr. Williams'
Pink Pills is shown icy the case of Mr.
Horace Cuphill, Woodward's Cove,
N. B., who Says:—"The first indication
that my general health was not good
was a shortness. of breath after the
least exertion. Then my appetite
began to fail, and after eating it
seemed as if there was a lump in my
stomach. 6 grew so weak that 1
could not walk a hundred yards with-
out resting. Them I was taken with
a numbness all over my body, and
was. in a Sad plight. I was under a
doctor's care; but as I was not get-
ting better, I decided to try Dr. Wil-
liams'*Pink Pills. The first few box-
es did not seem to help me but my
wife urged me to continue their use
and I got four boxes more. Before
these were gone I could eat a fair
meal, the numbness was leaving me
and I was feeling much better in
every way. I took the pills fpr a
while longer, and felt that I was a-
gain a well man. I still take the
pills 'aecasionally, but have had no
return of the old, trouble:" -
—You can get,- these pills frim any
medicine- dealer or by mail at 50 cents
a box from The Dr. Williams! Medi-
cine Co., Brockville, Ont.
ACTIVITIES- OF WOMEN.
Aznong the Jew,s in Tunis, widows,
are compelled to keep silence and
live-in- complete retirement for sev-
vrAl Morita after the husband's
Mrs. Mustapha Kemal, wife of, the
Turkish dic her
husband,,. in, his military, inspections,
net wolf ats'talting- part in bis political
ectivities.
A bobbed hair young wdtaiitin her
ea
'en iits3ditig judge
reihnity ',STA .1fit-4 calm
voice • sentenced seven men to death
for'. obbery., "•`',
ce/i Kane,. daughter of
fn. Se -Kane, ef Rhode
Island, is a noted sculptress and has
recently completed a bust of James
1 Hackett, the actor. •
, . I3arni1t ht of Washing-
'tretkiplOilited as
technical advisor to the league of iid-
tis for the control of
the opium praffie.
Thidsirthe tiiglish Ifw. the wife of
a crithinal is legally elistified* in -do-
ing all she can, short of committing
another crime, to shield her husband
fieffn juiftiee.
Mrs: Harriet. Church, wife of Judge
Georgi.K. bhueelli of California, eats
afti, her inisband's chauffeur because
she delights in driving and caring
for an automobile.
•TileT/
BIG GAME INCREASE IN JASPER
• PARK
Indications .of a continued rapid in-
crease in the number of big game an-,
imals as a result of sanctuary con-
ditions in Jasper National P,ark are
contained in recent reports from the
superintendent. Guides grazing their
pack -horses in, the Buffalo Prairie.
region of the park are finding dif-
ficulty In sieuring sufficient feed for
their animals owing to the excep-
tionally large numbers of elk, dear
and caribou, grazing in that sectiom
As Many as one hundred , elk have
been Seen feeding' there at one time
while sheep and goats are also r4 -
ported numeroua.
The nreat Slave -Driver and Tax
Eater
ilefore the war the per capita cost
in takes of running Uncle Sam's gov-
ernment was about $7. In 1920 it
was $63 for every man, woman and
child in the United States. In 1921
it dropped to $52. Last year it was
a little under $31 eachefor-110,000,-
"000 people. No babe now in the cra-
dle is likely to see the war taxes of
even so. peaceful ea country as the
United States return to $7.
Militarism is the world's greatest
tinge -maker slid slave-driver. It has
.49
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frtiale theY' placed vhiM" en. the r 3Lo
btwo1,4ayasyken 4 haft 1,104"
lete '
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' 7'77 ; igleent i• • •1 •
oilakleebAst,43t!"4140:9;:ie,
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'rack' 3493v ritf_; Pike hitn' on 1040
1'1'90 lia,O.Pr"' 9444 Vree' °"48' Titz7fvfiMs4heir4r. • od irthris
etrt
e POrtteil
rOPIV
e 'foe 'the laiedietill '.;
t•rktumt• ma 1
;7,72,Qz.*:nerttei:11.14474wki'tett:m7:4;;I:P.goisfer
. 'Ogg 'CliereitoAr. 4a—q
• P 4 ,,,
the final victerYiedia..inrre tbe -effretel
UAfi
Of Goole. With that thougliV.;
firMlY fixed ;there will ibei but 00
elestramute; f'orinderebrsuswied ebvees.r,Halawfillekit
whole eartb. be filled with "If
Amen and Amen."
—Toronto Globe.
• Jernes thathe'
. . received ,
Just, a. &sight. /*ewe* the ;tot
anti 'Fixtitile
MR. CLEARY TELLS oh.' ' nopiys
KIDNEY
They Relie* Hiedilditey Trouble and
Qther _Suffergre Can Learn Mom
Hie Eiperfeneeflpir They can Find
Pointe_Bleue, Que., May 22nd. (Spe-
cial). Simple and straight tothe
point. is •the statement of Mr. Louis
Cleary, of this place. He has tried
Dodd's Kidney Pills and found them
good and he wanta everybody to
know it. Mr. Cleary says:
"Before taking Dodd's Kidney Pills
I was not able to walk. Thanks to
your -pills I am now perfectly well. I
fine them very good." One simple
statement like this is worth a dozen
learned disseitions in kidney disease.
It tells the sufferer from Kidney
trouble just what he or she wants to
know—that relief can be, -found ip
Dodd's Kidney Pills.
•For Dodd's Kidney Pills are no ex-
periment. They are purelY and simp-
ly a Kidney remedy. The reason why
they relieve Rhetiniatism, Lumbagp,
Diabetes, Bright's Disease, Heart
Filutterings, Dropsy, Pain in the
Back, and other diseaies is that all
these are caused by disordered Kid-
neys.
Dodd's Kidney Pills make men and
women feel young again ecause they
pread good health all over the bodr.
If you haven't used Dodd's Kidney
Pills for Kidney troubles, you should
do so at once. Hear what yolir neigh-
bors have to say about them.
SUNDAY AFTERNOON
(By Isabel Hamilton, Goderich, On;.)
Holy, holy, holy Lord
God of hosts! when heaven and earth
Out of darkness, at Thy word
. Issued into glorious birth,
All Thy work before Thee stood,
And Thine eye beheld them good,
While they sang with sweet accord,
'Holy,. leoly, holy Lord!'
'Holy, holy, holy, all
Heaven's triumphant choi/shall sing
When ransomed nations fall
At the footsteps of their king;
Then shall saints and seraphim,
Hearts and voices; swell one hymn,
Round the throne -with full acCord,
'Holy, holy; holy Lord!'
James Montgomery.
PRAYER
Father of heaven, before whose
throne cherubim and seraphim veil
their faces and cry holy, holy, holy.
Lord God Almighty give ear unto our
prayer as we too bend in adoring
love. Enable us by thy guidance of
Thy Holy Spirit to say, Bressipg, and
honour and glory, and'nower be unto
Him that sitteth upon the thrcme,
and unto the Lamle for ever and ever.
Amen.
SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON FOR
• MAY 27th, 1923
Lesson Title--Isaiati the Ststesman
,—Prophet.
Lesson Passage--Isa. :1.8.
Golden Text---Isa.
' Of the family of bigfah little is
known. Jewish writers connected
Sint with royalty, bis ether, Amoz,
'OeIng the eon of Joash, king of Judah,
b 'lived for the greater part of a
century during the reigns of five
kings: Ueoziah, Jotham, Ahaz, Hese-
liab an Manasseh. During 'that
long period events that were among
'the most important in Jewish his-
tory, took place, and Isaiah was. the
foremost prophet of thpse years
though Jonah, Hosea and Tliah Were
-contemporaeies. He gave him -
Self whole-heartedly to the work to
which he had been called. To con-
nect Biblical history with secular
gives us an insight into world events,
so here we state that the kingdom of
Babylon was at the height of its
greatness during Isaiah's life time
and the kingdom of Macedon was
founded about fifty years earlier and
Rome also was founded during his
life. In all ages Isaiah has been re-
garded as the most sublime of all
writers, and in to -day's lesson there
is a wonderful description of the
manifestation of Jehovah to Isaiah.
It is his call to the office of prophet
and the giving' of a solemn commis-
sion to him to make plain God's pur-
poses to the Jews.
This sixth chapter comprises three
parts:
lst—The Vision.
2nd—The effect on the prohet.
3rd—The commission of the pro-
phet.
Verses, 1-4. "In the year that King
Uzziah died." After a long and pro-
sperous reign Uzziah was guilty of
claiming as a king the right to go in-
to the temple and offer 'Aunt incense
on the altar. For this sin 'he became
a leper and thereafter lived a separ-
ated life. Consequently the affairs
of the kingdom were administered by
his son. Some writers think that it
may have been in the year he died
officially that Isaiah saw the vision.
Similar visions "are described in 1
Kings 22:19 and Dan. 7:13.
The vision:—"I saw also the Lord
sitting upon a throne, high tihd lilInd
up, and his train filled the temple."
Jehovah is seen upon a throne clad
in the manner of an ancient monarch
with a robe and a train that filled the
,iTebellious Renepetleint The Meseta
was seen' eeated- 0114%throne an'. a
king, 04.thed in 0 f,"; flowing robe
that filled- all e holy parte . of
1,4
the .temple: . T Wahl regardell
such 'large :140. indicative of
grandeur and ...tate,,,,Alt is the attire
apd the svirroundiagyi,inot the- Mes.
slab that are .deiteelbed. This very
thing inepresees onea sense uf
the Divine majesty and awe that
must have filled. the lead of Isaiah.
'Above it....stood ' he seraPhims ;
each one had six 'Wings, with twain
he covered his fie% and with twain
he covered, his feet, and with twain
he did fly."
The Rev. G. #1, Max -risen in a ser-
mon on the veiled Feces of the Ser-
aphim" says: Thiele .the only place:
in the Old Testament where we find
Mentionof the seraPhirn. It is the.
one glimpse we have in Scripture of
these strange creatures. by the throne
of God. They were *n fashion as a
man, for they had hands and feet.
Yet each was the possessor of six
wings. With twain they did fly, in
the ministry of' God; with twain in
humility they hid their feet. But
most subduing of all perhaps is this,
that before the dazzling radiance of
God with twain they covered tfieir
faces. Just as a mart who has ling-
ered in the shadows and steps out
suddenly into a blaze .of light, puts
up his hand before hie eyes, instinct-
ively to shield them frim that blind-
ing glare, so these'raysterious beings
round the throne, returning from
their voyaging through the universe,
cover their faces in the light of God.
"And one cried unto another and
said, Holy, holy, holy is the Lord of
hosts; the whole earth is full of his
glory. This was an ancient mode of
singing among the Hebrews.
"And the posts of the door moved
at the voice of him 'that cried, and
the house was filled with smoke." A
tremor went through the temple
causing not only the door but the
very posts of the door to shake; an
indication of God's wrath against the
people for their sins. The house was
darkened: it was filled with smoke,
which was a cloud spread upon the
face of his throne (Job 26.9).
Verses 6-8. •
Here we have the effect which this
viSion of the glory of God had upon
the prophet. -He was filled with con-
sternation: "woe is me! for I am un-
done! because I inn a man of unclean
lips, and I dwell in the midst of a
people of unclean lips."
'He realized as never before that
he was a sinner; that he had not
"offered the sacrifice of praise to God
continually, that is, the fruit of our
lipgiving thanks to' his name."
(Heb. 13.14). He had beep so deeply
'impressed with the profound worship
.of the seraphim and the majesty and
glory of What he saw that he was
overwhelmed with his own unworth-
*nees to worship or serve so pure a
God. A similar effect is recorded in
:....ulfe,5-8 in reference to the .Apostle
Peter. "When Simon Peter saw it
Adm. miracle which hens had
Iwieught) he fell down at Jesus'
jimees • saying,. "Depart from me, for
.I, are a sinful man, 0 ,Lord." The
;prophets' fears were allayed by the
speittring of comforting mirth. and
.
th.o, purifying of hia lips by on* of
the seraphim s flying to hint' and pled -
a live coal from off the altar up -
6n his lips. He was purified as by
fire. The fire on the alter was first
kindled by the Lord (Lev. 924) and
iveas kept continually burning.
And he laid it upon my mouth, and
said, "Lo, this hath touched thy lips,
;and thine iniquity is taken away, and
!thi sin purg•en." The guilt' of his
tongue -sins was removed and so he
was fitted to associate with the heav-
enly . worshippers in praising God
and was ready now to be employed
,as a messenger to the - children of
men.
"Also I heard the voice of the Lord,
saying, Whom shall I send, and who
will go for us? Then said I, Here
am I; send me." None are allowed
to go for God but those who are sent
by Him; he will own none but those
whom he appoints (Rom. 10.15). So
Isaiah, realizingethis. indicated his
readiness:, "Here em I." It was
volunteer service gladly entered upon
after his eyes had seen the King and
known the meaning of saved by
grace.
To -day the need is ei-eat, the world
is still lying in greet darkness and
the call is insistent for men to go as
ambassadors for the king.
Who, who, will go, salvation's' story
telling,
Looking to Jesus, minting not the
cost?
. WORLD missrONS
Fifty-one years ago on Friday,
March 9th, Dr. George Leslie Mac-
kay, a native of Oxford county, On-
tario, landed on the Tsland of For -
mega and began his missionary work
there, the first foreign missionary
from Ontario. One year later, in
spring of 1873, just half ae century
ago the first five, con ye rte of the For-
mosa missions were baptized. It is
.eminently fitting, therefore, that
March 1$, 1923, should have he'en se-
lected by the Canadian Presbyterian
church as the day on which -the jubi-
lee anniversary of the founding of
the church in Formosa would be cele -
finned. Through fifty years of
storm and tempest, during which
,.eseeiteeitee,5ti.Se"r44z4egi'q.;ii'gt,',"k'fie VeiWPAIRM ,0,100'itii0fierftii.ek41§1•44,';',E4BFX, ,
„ . •
'
' `56:Pte
A Wonderful P
ForThrifty hook
Write for full particular. of the
Assured Savings Plan
SAVINGS OFR
Head Office 15 &reeks' Pas* Avenue Siesta
Branches at Hamilton, Ottawa, St. Cathaeinea, Woodateek,
Seafork, Walkeiten, St. Mazy* Pembroke. OweiWSrli • -
Newlsot and Aylmer.
• .
Simply Out This Coupon
PROVINCE OF ONTARIO SAVINGS OFFICE
SEAFORTH, ONTARIO
Please send me booklet describing the.
Assured Savings Plan in full.
Name
34 Address
other
says
"Let the pora of 'your akin breathe freely like a child's"
Wilte faznily use it
iNFANT
MIGHT
"TOILET SOAP
55
JOHN TAYLOR & CO., LIMITED
'TORONTO
.".