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The Wingham Advance Times, 1929-03-14, Page 3amosuommanla Personal Seise aunts CANNED GOODS WEEK ... Special values in finest canned goods. The specials listed are but a few of the many fine offerings for this week. Asparagus Cuttings LynA Valley, tin 27c Wax Beans « , Domino $rand, tin 25c Diced Carrot Aylmer Erand,2 tins 25c •Sauerkraut - Libby's, 2 tins 25c Golden Corn gamin, tin 18c Spinach - - Delmonte Brand, tin 2lc Bayside'Brand' PEARS In Light Syrup 2 Tins 27c Holly Brand PEACHES No.2 Tin 19c Bayside Brand Choice Quality TEAS r ,CORN �i or Tomatoes Tins 23c DELMONTE BRAND PINEAPPLE Hawaiian Crushed, tin 25c Hawaiian Sliced tin 28c BRUNSWICK SARDINES 2 tins 11 C Chicken Haddie Kipper Snacks Lobater Paste Sardines - Crab Meat Pimentos - Cherlries GrapefruitY - Richmello Blend COFFEE ;gin•31Chh•il,., Tin C Lily Brand, tin 21'c A. Real Treat, 2 tins, 1 3c For Sandwiches, 2 tins 25c Finest Norwegian, 2 tins 25c Fancy Japanese , tin 35c Finest Spanish, 2 tins 5c' Red Pitted 'tin 25c Canned, Florida tin d,Ic Choice Pink SALMON 14b Tin 17c roxeter 'Thursday, March 14th. 1929 x7a ilnyi'' Pring linr: knopinow:.'c1 THE CANADIAN NATIONAL B. & B. GANG Now. Allen the foreman, makes a very bond boss, Tho' sometimes he gets' a little bit cross, He tells each one: what he is to do • And expects a good job when we get through, Altho' notr the : strong man he used to be When he was young and . strong at thirty-three But take him all-round. he is sure pretty fair And if he keeps just as good, then 1 don't care. And then George Baird is a g'uod old mate Tho' he sometimes missed the train .and got to work late, Hes a real good- scoot at sixty-three "And can shale a leg with 111any• a Man of twenty-three; It is .trite that in arguments we do not always .agree. And the blame as, a rule is laid upon me But when he quits wc)rk on the C. N. Railway 1t will sure be lonesome for those who stay. And then Alex Davidson, vvho comes ',€eon'+Toronto, About as fine a city as 'the sun shines onto, He's a, very, good lean so quick and strong And is much admired by the passing throng. Hiswifeis paid to sing; nice solos, And the church is filled with enchanting echoes, very particular with his. 'tools and clothes' Always knows where to find theist for he lays them in rows. Then conies Denny ileemer from the" town of Drurnbo, It would ;be i. good place to have kept old .Jltulbo He's 1 real good worker, tho' he smokes cigarettes , 3e. always •.pays 1us way, tho' he never bets. He's the first- one up to leek for the cool. And always greets us with a pleasant look '.liepicks up his ,tools and keeps everything right .Always keeps tt-goink front morning- till night. .13ob .I..awson is a' good fellow and, conies regular to nerlr. 'Wltile I was with him he never wotlld shirt:, 1 e .is .classed as a carpenter, with tools not so bad,' Tf 1 was as good 1 would sure be 'vcr`y glad, 13ob is really' not .a bads sort: of chilli ;rb,o' he does quite a bit of grumbling in regard to the 'n:t1h', We ;Can't agree on the price eller farmer must 'produce So we'll just let the matter' drop and go to the. deuce. 1- r on1 'Ripley there coupes .Angus i1'Cc1 cod, He never says auytlling that is not out load, In:e's •a very good fellow and loud of the Scotch; And. T guess that year, ago he went by the notch, His tools were like mine—"Not very good" Peat we <tl1ays worked :Ind' said no hing-but sawed wood He's a real good. sport and fond:of ka laugh b. And t very good .man to 'make one of the staff. 'Then aio:lg eagle Dan Pew and gave Inc : -bump - 'When 1 first got the word My heart Went thippity th T guess he's 'a good in ni Alio' ICC I1c1S a i.gamc leg, But for all that°hc May be a i,00d sort of a peg, 11ty advice to hillih. is to do his very best, And put forth all that's in him to keep ttp with the rest, = And, if by all rneitni;. the Fm an' xsttisfy, A is' simply surmising how 'hist 'thevti.me will fly. Y And last but not least comes 'Lloyd With his :fame, 1 111. vet'y. 51n -e, :his cooking would put 1110St Women to :S, He_ is pleasing, lhelpfttl '<tnd ittcomodai:ing.. to all, I'm sore at tittles for his s:erviecs his shay is toil :He gives .rte the scraps' for lily chickens to eat, And when 1' feed them 1 Can eta down the wheat, 1;.11opo You are cooking and 'working just :as you should, A.nd if you always de that the pied Will 'fare "very good" Sioalelcy, 111e; •<„ 1THE SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON + LESSON XI—MARCH 17 "The Christian Sabbath." Ex, :204 8 11; Matt: 12. 1-8; John 20: 19; Rev 7x10. Golden Text.—For the Son of Mars is the lord of the ''Sabbath. THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING. Tithe !and Place.=Tlhe Ten 'Com- mandments given to Moses an Mount Sinai aitbout B. C..1498. Christ's dis- course . on the Sabbath and healing of the man with thewithered hand, Capernaum,•May or June.of A.D, 28, in the second ' year of his ministry. The resurrection 41 'Jerusalem on Sunday, April 9; A.1). 30_ John writes the Rcveltltion, ,island of Patmos, A. D. 68 (soln'e say about A.D. 96): '.THE SABBATH ORDAINED. "Remember the Sabbath day, tc 'keep_ it holy:"—The first word is "Re member." \,Ve cannot keep the Sab bath holy unless we take thought foi if we 'forget it and are careless about it, the sacred day 'uill be sural - lowed up in our ;secular' .life. HoM are we to .keep it holy?. "Holy' means consecrated, set .apart for sac- red uses. There are foto principles Whereby Sunday may be .set apart front other days: "Negatively, let not your 'Sunday be slothful. Let not your Sunday he frivolous. Let not your Sunday be selfish. Positively, let your Sunday be 's piritual."—F. W, Farrar, ' "Six days shalt • thou labor, and 'do all thy work."—This is another nec- essary Sabbath rule. ' The Fourth i' Comandment is" as definite a re- quirement of labor on the :;six days as of rest on the seventh. ' If we do' .not work faithfully before Sunday, we shall either labor on' the Lord's day or feel that:!unrest of spirit which prevents the proper observance of the day. "I3ut the seventh day is a Sabbath. 'unto Jehovah thy God." --That is, "devoted `unto Jehovah thy God." "Sabbath" means "rest," so that here we have the two elements of question sharply' implies that ,the 1'harlsees, being so pious, should have been familiar with these, Bible h•eferenc(:s. "'When rte vias' hungry, ro and they that were with him."—David was.their great national hero,. and his rn caaple would l e honored by all. Christ omits to state that David was one of His earthly ,ancestors. ow he enteredinto the House of 'God."—"Jhe tabernacle, this being be- fore the days of .the teinple. :"And ate the showbread."—Twelve loaves of bread were placed on a table in the Holy; Place—one for each of the twelve tribes of Israel. "Which it was not lawful for him to eat, neither for them that Were with high, but only' for the priests?"^ -Five loaves of the showbread were given to :David ihld his companions by. 'Abinielech; the priest of Nob. " Or have Ve not react .in the law." —The very law 'which the I.'barisess pretended to reverence. , That on' elle Sabbath day the priests in the tenl- plc profane the Sabbath and are. - guiltless?"-1Ime law required them to - do manual labor, e. ;•., to change the r tsa'elve loaves of bread for fresh loaves, to inalc the fire .for the'sac- r•ifice, to' conduct all the work of the - isanctuary. Sunday is the busiest' day ' of the week for the ministers. "But 1 say •unto. you, that one great- er, than . the teimlple is here."—The, :Pharisees would be still hnorc enraged by this claim. The argument is "If the priests can lawfully serve the temple on the Sabbath, so my disci- ples can lawfully do on the Sabbath anything- which '1, who and ;treater than the temple, require or allow." ":[3irt iF ye had known what this meanetlh."—:\pother sarcastic hint that the Pharisees were really ignor- ant of 'the law they professed to re- gard so highly, I desire mercy and notsacrifice. Of course Jehovah desies both mercy and retigious ob- servance,' but not the second in place of the first or id detraction from the first. "Ye would not have condemned the, guiltless; i. e, Christ's disciples, who were doing no wrong. "For the .Son of Man is lord of the Sabbath." -Since "the Sabbath was made. for man" (Mark 2: 27), as Christ said at this time, and since Christ summed up' elan in Himself, He had a right to lay down the roles "kt the : Lord's day; rest and worship. "In it thou shalt not do any. work." —It is certainly desirable that as many persons as possible shall keep the same day; only so can its social value, as a day for .families to be to- gether, for friends to see each other, for fellow believers to »rorship, in conmon, be maintained. "Thou."—Heads of families, if they want the 'Sabbath :observed - by others, , must first observe it them- selves. "Nor -thy sun,. nor thy .dais- gllter."—The young, people of to -day are :more and more turning away froin Sabbath=keeping. Many: even of the Christian youth are becoming lax, in, this regard. "Thy man -ser- vant, Ihoi- thy tl.laid-$e.1'1 shit."-- In !ev- ery ev-ery Christian household' Sablyalth work should be reduced to a lnini- mnunr. if we do not care to keep .the Sabbath ourselves, We ought at any rate to allow others to keep it, "Nor thy cattle. Seven days of toil ar•e bad for cattle as hell as for' malt, "Nor thy stranger that is within thy mates."—"Thy gates" means "thy res, enclosed within isillst "For hi,.six days Jehovah Made heaven and earth, the sea, and all. that in therm is, and rested the- sei'- etith ,day.''—Not that the ,Almighty needed to .rest, as glen needs ter, but He had completed the gigantic task, "Wherefore Jehovali blessed the Sab- bath day, and hallowed i:."---.',1'fre:Sab- batll.'vvas' shade for elan, as:,' Christ said, and not for God.. He made if sacr'ctt, that open night have tithe to. draw`near to God., . THE LORD'S DAY,. "rAt that scasorh."—In the spring, between paesove'r 'an(1 pentecost "Je- sus went on the Sabbath day through the grainfields."—.1'tiblic paths ltd through the field. ",And His' discip-, les were hungry and began to pluck ears and to cat.'-'•--This:bWWa5 not con- sidered.: stealing, "Bat the.Pharisees, when they stave 11, said unto Eli i."---J'esus was- not Himself plueking the grain; but lie was ttte . leader, and 'His discinles: would not do it tulles: Fre allowed it; so the Pharisees brought their com- plaint to Him. ".l' chord, thy disciples do that which is not 'lawful to do up- on the .Sabbath,"; --'Cel pltieic ears of grain was, in a sense, the Pharisees acid, to reap, amd,to reap On the _Sab- bath day was forbidden atic1punish- able by death, '1"o 11111 the grain in the iiimd, weliaratirhf the kernel 'front the chaff, the Pharisees called a kind of threshing! ' "T;trt ITe sold ilmto them, 'Thiv e e y not read what TJavid did."-Tt was probably done 011-t le Sabbath. Christ's Herbs ,Y e Best for fling Kidneys Natural, safe and wonder fearly healing Herbs, and herbs only, are used in Gal- lagher's Kidney Remedy which is one of the old, proven, Herbal household Remedies that the muted herbalist, James' Gallagher, compounded himself more than 50, years ago. And these good herbs, Nature's gift, have great heni ing power. Even acutekidney ailments like Rheumatism, are relieved by Gal- lagher's. Bad backaches, dizzy spells and bladder miseries- soon stop. • Try this trustworthy herbal remedy. Itis remarkable—and safe. Sold by 3s McKibbon's Drug Store's Harriston and Wingham INEIN SPRING SUITINGS Our Sample Made -to -Measure Spring' Suitings are now in. They are 'the best values for the money we have had....Suits from $22.5o upto $55.oe, made up_ with best of trimtning and tailored to your satisfaction. We have a number of winter Overcoats left which' we will sell atgreatly reduced prices. It will pay 'you to invest before they all go. We are giving zo% reduction in, price on Underwear,: Sweat ers, ... Wind -breakers, ...R'ubbers and Over Shoes, 1 Buy your Sugar now. HIGHEST PRICES FOR EGGS The team leaves Tuesday and `ridays with cream for the Co- operative Company. DAVEY'S STORE ROTEa 1 for Sabbath observance, and certain- ly. to dceide how 'His followers shuuld bear themselves on 11is day. "When tltetefore, it was evening, on that day."the day of Christ's re- sturection, "The first day of the vvicel, "-I1 must have been long; after sunset, for the two disciples had re- ttirped from Emmaus (Luke 24: 23), which they had left in the evening; ,t'herefore, as John speaks of this.: as still the first day, he must have used the modern reckoning; of the day . as ending at midnight, not the Jewish - reckoning which closed the day at sunset: "And when tlt.edoors were shirt where the disciples'i',ere, for. fear of the Jews."—This fact is` men- tioned to shun,- the supernatural' char- acter' of Christ's appearance, 'coming through a closed door. "Jesus came. and stood in the midst,"—The discip- les were probably still in the upper' room of the Lord's Supper, which scents to have been in the house of Mary, .the mother of John Ma'h "And saith unto them, Peace be unto you."—The ordinary greeting intensi- fied. . His last word, to them in their. sorrow before His passion (:John 16: 83), .His first word to them .in their terrcar (Late 24: 37), at his return is "Peace."—Cambridge Bible. In this striking scene we have another glim- pse of that wonderful first Lord's day which so impressed itself on the Christian church as to give rise to. our Sunday. "1 was in the spirit of the Lord's day.''—St. John's faithful preaching of Jesus Christ in the great -heathen city of Ephesus had brought about his banishment to the island of Patmos in the )Egean Sea, where he had the glorious .visions recorded in the Rev- elation. He says that on the Lord's day, the resurrection day, lie 'was in, the spirit,' iwithdrawn front the forms of Which the sense take account, seek- ing his he "was.in the Spirit." "I heard behindpie a great voice, as of a trumpet."—That is the purpose of the Lord's day, that we may hear the ,Lord's voice, speaking to us of our sin and His grace, of our duty and His enabling, of earth and hea- ven, of time 'and eternity. May we so use the day as to bear the voice, and, hearing, heed. WROXETER Miss Mary Howe was in Dunnville last week attending the funeral 'of an uncle. Miss Margaret Bennett was able to resume 'her 'duties .in. the Insurance office after a two weeks illness, Miss E. 1). Hazlewood has been in- disposed for a couple of weeks. A couple of horse. buyer, *ere in. the village Monday. Several fine I•orses were on the market but not many sales were glade, Mrs. H. Waller attended the funer- al of a friend in Listowel on Wed- nesday. e.sday. Mr, and Mrs. D. 1). Sanderson en- tertained their many friends at an old r time party Monday night. With two systems for lighting (Hy- I dro and the old municipal plant) half the people have no electric lights aird 1 no street lighting and no one scents! to know when we will. Had we some! system of government in the place this would not have happened, as it , is our plant wasshutcrown before the Hydro street lights were arranged for. Some management about that.. GORRIE Services will be held in the United Church '(luring Passion Week from 1 March 25th to 29th. The following 11111Iistel'$ have consented to pi'(`aCh, Rev, R. S. Jones; Rev. (1, Paton, Rev. 1. Bolingbroke and :Rev. E. C:hand ler. The pastor will conduct the ser- vice on. Goad Friday. Services will 'he held at 8 l),u1. each night: Uivrpi., to 1111. o. es being prevalent iti the district the Irish Social planit- ed, by the Ladies' Aid of the United. church willbe postponed. ; Airs, W. Pritchard of Ifarriston re- cently spent a few' days with Mrs, (fare Pritchard in Borrie. \,Cr., \l:txwell .\brant returned from 1,istowl•1 on Monday evening 111,010 pa.nied b3 her mother, 'who has been on the Biel: list. A ,pc;ial meeting uf tlte 1)i mn:.C. ,side wtts held on M.tonday evening. 1'Tis, Tgatiti1ie Bakc:1 y',ililiavc charge:, of the topic at the. regular Ieagn•. 1e1'1,101' on Friday evening., "1"ht:.:stlbjcct will be"The Cross -the 14ey:'of Life," Moved to i4lilten. Wigg, manager .of the Walker Stores, Lirthited, Ltickrrow, has been transferred to the Milton llranch, leaving last week. His successor is \lir; Robt. 1)uthiie, And' teas varletstfp ket fon finest rr.ilsiiv lend. Still the Best for Bread Arly Scth lers Walked armies :to get a bag of flout and if you couldn't get Purity Flour today at all good grocers it would be still worth walking miles for because it is "best for all your baking." A Baling Expert says: "Purityis a strong, rick flour with great expand- ing qualities . . . if your cake recipe calls for ordinary pastry flour use 1 tablespoon less per cin of Purity,; and if milk is called for use half milk and half water (luke- warm), as milk : alone tends to make the cake dry„ For pastry that melts in your mouth, use 2 sable: peons less per clip of Purity, Flour and. 1 level tablespoon more of 'shortening. Roll it dry. hot stts rich pastrl list half butter and hall lard, Get a sack of Purity Flour today. are famous Purity Flour Cook Book mailed for 30c. Western Canada Flour Mills Co. Limited Toronto 911 TM."� .t., z h u•�1A '4.'1' .iK+µ ''S t lir iz For children's bronchial and chest ra>: teats ---no finer relief than Veno's Lightning Cough Syrup,— Children love it. .M, variglAk The Royal Master Not ons.koyplMaster inn Thousand will aver puncture. N t orae in fife ihoirstttad'e ill blow oat untier,avo years Of service. E hate to see tire mileage wasted —whent might R be saved it rll It ave sot easily. We love to see well -cared -for tires: We enjoy making the small repair in a cut tread, a. bruised.sidewall, knowing full well that such repairs add thou- sands of miles to the life of tires. Thats why we recommend : a weekly outside examination of tires --and a periodic overhauligg inside and out several tones a year. This enables us to find r11 injuries at their beginning -to make the "stitch in time". You arc never /a way Iron ct VirIT�YC11Ai4l..:........ ....... .... ... .; .....:Vi'tt. rhlgham 11Fit.t Ct,ANt Y. A. Young G'ORRIt 1v, 11f Carson and Sort to