The Wingham Advance Times, 1929-12-26, Page 3y, December '?6th;
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Thursday, December 26th, 1929
SUPERIO
c
WE SELL THE
Seedless Raisins, 2 lbs. for .25c
Mincemeat; Special, 2 lits, 27c
Jewel Shortening; spec. 19c lb.
Derby Loaf Cheese, spec. 33c lb.
McCormick's Water Ice Wa-
fer, per lb. 35c
New Novel Oranges, per do-
zen 39c, 49c, 59c
'Choice Dates, 2 lbs. for ,23c
Mixed Nuts No. 1, special at
per Ib. 25c
Candies specially priced from
19c to 35e a lb.
Grapes, Cranberries, Grape
Fruit, Peanuts, Lemons, at spe-
cial prices.
TORES
Men's Scarfs, Fancy Socks,
Ties, Garters, Braces, Gloves,
Arm Bands, , Pyjamas, Shirts,
Garter and Arm Band Sets in
fancy Xmas boxes.
Women's Turnbeull's Silk ..
Underwear, Silk, Silk and Wool
Hose, Shoe Trees, Lunclieeon
Cloths, Blankets, Handkerchiefs
at special prices.
WISHING ALL A MERRY CHRISTMAS'
MUNRO'S
Telephone 56
WROXETER
THE SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON
LESSON XIII—DECEMBER 29
'Fellowship Through Worship -Ps.
122: 1-9; Heb. •10: 22-25
,Golden Text.—Hie entered, as his cus-
tom was, into the synagogue on
Sabbath day.—Luke 4:16.
the;
'THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING.
Time and Place. — Ezra's Bible
school in Jerusalem, B.C. 444. The
Great 'Commission given on a moun-
•tain• in Galilee in May, A.D. 30. The
.Epistle to the Hebrews was written
DR. C. C. RAMAGE
DENTIST, GORRIE
Phone 21 (Stinson residence),
Fordwich on Wednesday.
1 to 9 o'clock. -
F. F. HOMUTH
Phm. B., cOpt. D., R. O.
OPTOMETRIST
Phone 118 Harriston, Ont.
at some time before the fall of Jeru-
salem in A.D. 70.
GOING TO CHURCH TOGETHER
I was glad when they said unto
me, Let ass go unto the house of Je-
hovah, .ehDavid's Heart was in the wor-
ship of God, 'and' he was delighted
when 'he found others inviting him
to go where his desires had already
gone.
Our feet are standing within thy
gates, 0 Jerusalem. "Are standing"
is in the margin "have stood." "It
may mean `have been and still, are
standing.' It suggests that when the
pilgrim reached the city gates, they
halted for a while, spellbound by the
sight o fits magnificence, and by the
memories of its ancient glories."
Jerusalem, thou are builded is a
city .that i,s compaa together. The
reference is to the narrow streets of
the city within the walls, making it
seem 'very solid and compact, espec-
ially to the pilgrims coming from the
villages where the spaces are snore
open and less crowded.
Whither the tribes go up, even the
tribes of Jehovah. ."Up" refers to
the high' ground on which Jerusa'l'em
is placed; but it is customary to speak
of • going "up" to a metropolis, even
though the city may be on low
ground. For an ordinace for Israel.
Dr, Maclaren translates it, "Accord-
ing to the precept for Israel.';,, The
tribes make the journey primarily 'be-
cause God has commanded them to
do so. To give thanks unto the name
of Jehovah, The pilgrims go ,up to
erusalem iwt merely because •cora-
manded by God to do so, but be-
aus'e • moved thereby by their owntearts.
"The Best Equipped Optical Es- J
tablishment in this part of
Ontario". c
For there (in Jerusalem) are set
thrones for judgment: The king was
also the judge, in many cases. The
thrones of the house of David. "The
king appears to have been assisted
in his judicial functions by members
of the royal family.
Pray for the peace of Jerusalem.
The player is that the nomen may
become omen, and that the hope that
moved in the hearts that had so long
ago and in the midst of wars given
so far a ' designation to their abode,
may be fulfilled now at last. They
shall prosper that love thee. Pros-
perity still attends those who love
the name and cause. of God. In such
souls there are already present the
•elements of prosperity and blessed-
ness.
Pace be within thy walls, and pros-
perity within thy palaces. Peace and
repose from all distracting causes, of
whatever nature.
For my brethren and companions
sakes, I will now say, Peace be with-
in ;thee. Church -going has to all of
us a more intimate aspect, for it is
in God's house that we meet our
comrades, our friends, our brothers
and sisters in Christ, and this close
human fellowship adds to the bless-' t
edness of the place and increases our o
eamaaaemeeeeeeeeeeeee
of this entire Epistle. It is by faith,
full, sincere, earnest, and eager, that
we believe on Christ, Who is the Way
to God; and •no one can draw near
to God with any falsity in bis heart
and life. But how can we get true
hearts, since we know that our, sin,.
ful hearts are anything but true? The
writer goes on to tell us: Having our
hearts sprinkled from an evil con-
science: and having our body washed
with pure water. Body and heart are
outer and inner, the whole man is to
be purified by Christ.
Let us hold fast the confession of
our hope that it waver not, The wri-
ter so frequently exhorts to constan-
cy in the Christian confession as to
make it clear that he is writing to
Christians, many of whom have been
wavering` .For he is faithful that pro-
mised. -The faith of the Christian
may fail; but Christ's never fails, and
His faith is available for the believer.
And let us consider one another to
provoke unto love and good works.
"Let us regard one another, taking
into account each other's circumstan-'
ces, temptations, weaknesses, and the
like, so as to support one another."
That also is •one of the blessings that
should come from church member-
ship and church attendance, and this
mutual encouragement and watchful
care is a side of church life which is
very likely to be neglected.
Not forsaking our own assembling.
together, as the custom of some is,
but exhorting one another.' Love
seeketh not its own; it gives itself
away, and only lives to make others
Partakers of its happiness. And so
much the more, as ye see the day
drawing to
tv A nigh• 'The day' is of
course the day of the Lord's return
(Heb, 9:28), the day of days." In
view of • that climax of all events,
which is ever drawing nearer, all
matters of worship, all religious ob-
servances, all the fellowship of 'the
saints, shine with fresh beauty 'and
glow with new meaning. Christians
are constantly to heed their Lord's
command, "Watch: for ye know not
on what day your Lord cometh"
(Matt. 24:42). And how can we bet-
er watch than in the company of
ther believers?
longing for it.
For the sake of the house of Je-
hovah our God I will seek thy good.
Jerusalem is dear to the psalmist for
many, reasons, but chiefly because it
is the'home of God, God's house.
THE FELLOWSHIP OF
BELIEVERS'
Let us draw near with a 'true heart
in fulness of faith. Drawing near to
God may be said -to be the subject
•
WROXETER
Mrs, Walker has moved her house-
hold effects to the house on Ann st.,
which she purchased from Mrs, Wm.
Underwood.
The attendance at the School con-
cert was considerably reduced by the
storm on Friday night which was the
worst in years. Very -few could get
LEADERS OF NATIONS LOOK AT INDUSTRY
"4
wannomiesseumuumissegsznes
Viscount and Viscountess Willinadon and Vice -Regal Party
Leaving Largest Automobile Manufacturing Plant of the British
Bmptro, that of the Ford Motor Company of Canada. Limited;
at Fast Windsor,. Ontario.
Duties of Modern Executives
Dwarf Demands Made Upon
Kings of Yore.
°9IMI was when rulers; gath-
eking their intimates about
them took to the fields ,and
woods in search of.wild boar
:or 'slipped incognito into 'sequest;
Bred inns
when wished sur-
cease
-cease fr m
o s the dart state e of sia a ar
•opportunity to sit vis-a-vis with
their ,subjects,
Today, the executive obligations
of the head of a nation entail an in-
timate knowledge of the industries
that loom so prominently in the
general conditions of his country,
Recent trips of this nature by
the titular heads of the govern-
,' meats of Canada,Spain and the
Malted
States of
.F.morieaga`
ge rise
•to the conjecture as to :how their
respective prototypes would
have reaeted to the spectac-
les of modern mass production
that ntet the eyes and intellig-
epee of ' these modern leaderjt.
Any guess as to what henry
VIII
Isabella
or Washington
W tt
might have thought or said must
result only in the conclusion that
the lobate ;knowing how to conduct
a government these days is much
more
of a task than in thep eriods
"the often referred to as " the good
old days."
Ymproved .transportation facili-
ties have enlarged the importanee
of industry in all countries in its
relation to agriculture and corn -
!tierce since the days when govern-
ing was more leisurely. Governing
Way, if it is to safeguard the in-
terests both of laborer and manu-
facturer, and a'f it is to recognize
g
- all the essential elements of pros-
perity and Well-being for ; the na-
Top—President Hoover itt Genial Mood with Thomas A. Edison'
and henry Ford as his Companion, during Recent Visit at
yon
rMsrn, Mie
hi an—A
Ny Energeticer
;otic
Ruler
ofnin
S Xing
Alfonso, Asked 14famt (facetious During Trip Through Ford
Plant at Barcelona.
tion's peoples must include knowl-
edge of the industties upon which
a healthy state depends..
Visite made recently by Viseount
Willingden, vice -regal head of the
Canadian government; a
n Alfon-
so,
ruler of Spain and Preside t
Hoover, head of the American
state, to plants wheie Ford cars
and trucks are manufactured, are
indicative of the importance that
leaders of nations attach to .Alrst
hand information about the rode
industries of their respectii'e coun-
tries, Viscount. Wilf ingdon Was ace
eon panied by Viscountess Filling -
don on his inspection trip through
the largest automobile 'tnanufac,.
tering in the British s Empire,
re
that of the ford Motor Company
of
Canada Limited, at, East Windsor,
Ontario g' Alfonso King
s
n o evinced
keen interest in the many opera-
tions in the plant of the. Ford
Motor Company, S.A.E., .at Barce-
lona, and President IlooVer spent
much of his limited time while in
i)earborn, Mich., to honor x'hotnas
A.
Edison discussing the
he related
elated
•
eneral
;3uoteCtS b� production arid
prospects with HenryFord, his host,
in from the country with roads block-
ed with snow, but those who attend-
ed were well paid for'_venturing out,
although is teas impossible to have
the hall heated on .account of the, ex-
tremely cold wind, Everyone from
the little tots in the primary to the
seniors took their parts well and 'it
must have required a good deal, of
training by the teachers. Mr. W. S.
McKercher made a capable chairman.
Mrs. Allison Gibson celebrated her
one hundredth birthday on Friday,
December '21st, when quite a number
of friends and acquaintances called on
her to wish her many happy returns
of the., day, among whom were Mr.
and Mrs. Thomas Walker, Niagara
Falls.
Among the Christmas visitors who
have arrived to spend the holidays
here with friends are: Mrs. Grimshaw
and son, Detroit, with A. J. Sander-
son; Miss E. Sanderson, Markdale,
with D. D. Sanderson; Mr. and Mrs,
Norman Brandon, and family,. Ruth
and Daisie Stocks, London, with R.
Stocks; Mrs. , Haskins, Burlington
with Charley Sproal; Miss A Monroe
with Mrs, Monroe; •Miss Cassie Har-
ris with Miss Mary Harris; Kenneth
Edgar with Mrs. M. Edgar.
Man Can't Sleep, Gets
Nervous, Hates People
"I could not sleep and got so nerv-
ous I hated everybody. Since taking
Vinol, I can sleep 10 hours and feel
full of pep all day." Julius Bender.
For 30 years doctors have prescrib-
ed Vinol because it contains import-
ant mineral elements of iron, calcium
and cod liver peptone. The very
FIRST bottle brings sound sleep and
a BIG appetite. Nervous, wornout
people are surprised how QUICK Vi-
nol gives new life and pep! Tastes
delicious. McKibbon's Dreg Store. 3
ere and There
(423)
"Say it with apples," Canadian
Pacific Exprress Company slogan
for the sending of gifts by Cana-
dians to friends in Great Britain
and Europe, is being extended from
Christmas and New Year presents
to gifts sent at ail times of the
year. With the present banner
apple crop of Canada, the fruit can
be bought at a reasonable price and
its quality is of the highest, If
sent .overseas before the close of
navigation on the St. Lawrence,
cost will be considerably reduced.
Over 300 officers and men of the
.- 4th Canadian. Mounted Rifles first
mounted regiment, formed in Tor-
onto at the outbreak of the Great
War, is holding its first reunion
since the war at the Royal York
Hotel, Toronto, November 29 next.
The unit is proud of the factthat
it still has in its ranks T. Holmes
of Toronto, youngest Victoria
Cross bolder in Canada who cap-
tured an enemy machine gun nest
singlehanded at Passchendaele.
An apple tree, over a hundred
years old, remarkable for its sytu-
metry and having this year pro-
duced 22 barrels of Calkin Pippin
apples, is attracting much attention
in the orchard of Downey Morton,
Lakeville, King's County, Nova,
Scotia. Mr. Morton picked apples
from the same tree 55 years ago
and it was then a fully grown tree.
Today he believes it to be well over
the century mark.
The arrangement existing be-
tween the Canadian Pacific Rail-
way and the Government of Nova
Scotia with regard to English im-
migration which has proved mu-
tually satisfactory, will be con-
tinued for the coming year, is the
recent announcement of L. B, Fra-
ser, secretary to Premier Rhudes,
Superior grazing conditions in
British Columbia are given as the
reason for a shipment of 3600 grade
Ramboulet ewes and rams from
Montana recently made, to the Van-
couver Live Stock Exchange for
distribution to shop raisers in the
Kamloops and Cariboo districts of
British Columbia,
The farm: of Gustav Elgert of
Wetaskiwin that won the trop4ty
recently offeredby the Edmonton
Board of Trade for the best field
of wheat in the northern half of
the province of Alberta as well as
the eup donated by the Alberta
Government for the best farm in
Alberta, has yielded 46 bushels to
the acre on a 100 -acre field and
graded No, 1 hard
Elgert rt is an-
other
farmer who came to Canada
an-
,other
capital and has made a'
strilring succuss.
soolation has just t been»
� t created by - why T say think—it will
the Canadian Pacific department of i
Colonization
and Development meat
backed by influential organiza• ..11
.1
groups and individuals to E
promote' increased Tlrltislt settle -
anent in Canada,It ,will partial- LT Copyrighted, 1.929, A. I), Stone, I+reproductionrohibited inEarly benefit heads oWidnes milies in p
Canada desirous ,of bayingtheir d1
wives ante] families relent, hein In E
the Dominion, nion, and other
s
, estab-
k
]ishad on this side. wishing to helP,1
1 tncs in co-operation tttnw
the Lions CI
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relatives or friends overseasto
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GO.RRIE.
Miss Blythe McLaughlin returned
home last week after pending a
month with friends in Toronto:
Mr, Jno. Koine of North Bay is
spending the Christmas holidays with
his another, Mrs: S. G. Raine.
Master Norman Craik of Belleville
is spending the holidays with his par-
ents, Rev. and Mrs, Craik,
Mr. Jas. Eaton of Paisley was re-
newing old acquaintances in the vil-
lage last week.
Rev. R. S. Jones, Mrs, Jones and
Dick are spending Christmas with re-
latives at Brighton.
Miss Alma Hastie of Kitchener is
Spending the holidays at her home
south of the village.
Miss Bessie Wylie and Mr. Geo..
Wylie of Toronto are spending the
holidays with ,their mother, Mrs. Jno.
Wylie.
Good Groceries
Dates, 2 lbs. 21e; Seedless Raisins, f
2 lbs. 25c; McLaren Jelly Powders, 4
for 23c; 10 lb. sack Sugar 69c. King I
Bros,
Poultry and Potatoes
Small unmerchantable potatoes
may very profitably be fed to poul-
try. An experiment to compare boil-
ed potatoes with corn meal in the
laying mash showed that.the potato -
fed pens did even better than when
corn meaI was used. Each group was
fed a scratch mixture of two parts of
cracked corn, two parts wheat, and
one part oats. . One group received ved a
dry mash containing equal parts of
corn meal, wheat bran, wheat midd-
lings and crushed oats. The other
group received's. moist mash consist-
ing of equal parts of wheat bran, '
wheat middlings and crushed oats
mixed with boiled potatoes. The pro-
portions fed were two parts potatoes
and one part mash. Each group re-
ceived charcoal grit, milk, green feed
and water. Both egg production and
CHRISTMAS
COMES ONLY ONCE A
YEAR
Make it Merry and Prosperous
by Buying at Home.
We can supply you with qual-
ity goods at reasonable prices.
Our space is too limited to
quote prices. So we` will just
make a few suggestions. The
new Figs, Dates, Raisins, Cur-
rants, Peels, Extracts, Glaced
Cherries, Flavorings, you re-
quire for your Christmas bak-
ing are now in. We will have
a fine display of candy and.
fruits of al ]kinds. Special pric-
es in quantities for School
treats. We will put them up
in individual bags.
When looking for gifts call
and see our fancy boxed Ties,
Garters, Braces, Arm -Bands,
Fancy Hose etc. Just the thing
for a nice present.
We have reduced the price on
our dinner sets. We have a
nice assortment of fancy china
to choose from. We would like
to show you our stock of foot-
wear in Overshoes and Rubbers.
They are neat and comfortable
and are cheaper than they have
been for years.
We still have a number of
Overcoats to dispose of this
month at very reduced prices.
Also some men's wool and
fleece -lined underwear.
Bring Your Eggs and. Cream.
DAVEY'S STORE
W ROXETER®
immuommassommumosiowninemor
hatching results showed an advantage
in the case of the potato -fed poultry.
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And what are you going to do—sante as in 1929? If you do,
you are going to go against every law of progress. If you don't
change, you tt•ill be through—not all at once, to be sure, but you
Ill can't go forward standing still, and if you don't do better in 1980
E you'll be where you were in '29 and that's standing still—or going
! backward.
This reads like a sermon. It isn't utean( tltat way, It's just
my peculiar way of leading up to this—
T E TON ,,;;OCT_
The Doctor of Towns)
Slay
THINK—it won't hurt you any!
Thomas Edison once said, "The American people will go to
any extreme to avoid the necessity of thinking."
Notwithstanding that fact—think! This is the time of tithes
to think, Next week a year passes into "what used to be." It's
through; it's gone, and it will never return, Many, many things
were accomplished in the last 12 months, but that's ancient history.
There are a lot of things you could have done—that ancient history,
too. It isn't what you did or didn't do itt '29—it's what you are go-
ing to do in 1930 that counts now.
l9t!
If, in '29, you sort of went back on Win *lta'mn; if
t, you leaned
E back with your 100 -worn-out alibis and let the other fellow du the
awork; if you sat in the car while the other boys changed the tire; .
ra if 1,00 let some fool petty jealousy keep you out of the Chamber
0 of ('olnnlerce or Lions Club; if you turned sour because everybody
_ 'else couldn't see things as you did; if you acted up like a school kid.
and wouldn't play itt all, and tried to spoil the fun of others just
because: they wouldn't play your way and let you, be teacher; if E
i •
you pooh poohcd every attempt on the part of others to do some -
E
to
E thing to build Wingham; if you spent: your time pussy -footing, scan- ]iii
E dal 'mongering erinl and rabbit -lunching; if yon kept Your hands in your Pi
El ilapockets; leaning baecvitrd, while others werep putting their Shoulder
to the wheel pushing forward—.if year did these things, E
�l c and`:lcnew
moocher' - ..
, deserve up iii,
you were doing; them, you were a mac
--. consideration from neighbor or stranger.
TheBritish s
t Family Ire-C]'nian As -
HR
y
t
�fa�tit• c7un didn't
t
know ttt tt you t •,t •
crc doing sthin
do you good.
vltole or in part.
This "Town
Doctor" Article is ,1Lit '
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