fffi istim igmfa rr rws ltttlwtuay 93103 the acton free press paqe sbvbv t jjttuc bbight houses a tnt deb nd dark may seem the height of many womatt dream but oh little bouse for me a bouse 11 painted ahiningly outside and to itwbs at white ita abutters green its red roof bright r roses clambering up the walls where goldenly the sunlight falls i inside its door dutch tiles of blue v white curtains everywhere and through the sunny rooms the fresh clean smell of soap and water things that tsll a womans love her daily care of cupboard shelf and chair inherent love for things her owi which- woman ages long have known a house like this an any street to me is wonderfully sweet grace noll crowell 5f twenty years ago from the lane of- the free press thursday september 26 1912 thn apple p and packe are bus in this locality mr m op barry has been snipping turnips from here the past week potato rot is appearing to some extent in the crop nowbeing gathered 1912 will for years be noted for its rainy sundays during the summer hard ly a dry sunday since spring the farmers of erin township are shipping potatoes in large quantities the price the past week has been 50 cents a bag messrs w bayers f f sayera r j mcnabb ronald and malcolm sinclair left on monday on a fishing expedition to crow lake v our jewish citizens celebrated the feast for atonement the jews hotyest day last saturday with impressive ser- flnteng we in the land of promise ft the sunday school lesson fob sunday september 25 moses honored in his death review j golden text precious in the sight of jehovah is the death of his saints psalm 118 15 time 1451 b c place nebo exposition i the last words of moses to israel 4547 and disobeyed moses while he lived but wept for him when he died that is the way man treats gods servants until this day matt 23 2931 it is much more pleasing to god for us to obey a living prophet than for us to mourn over a dead one the israelites could have prolonged the life they now mourned es 106 32 33 though moses was dead god still lived cf josh 11 2 5 all night with asthma everyone knows how attacks of asthma often keep their victims awake the whole night long morning finds him wholly un- fitted r a day of business and yet moses had just given to the people business must stutbe carried the silver feb ottawa che capital of canada ispar- whbh you thfe- orrtleularlyinthelbllghtcxhaiuillcttej this wise man always- sets his heart earnestly upon anything which god has to say end hides that word in his heart ps 119 11 that is the one sure load to prosperity in everything one does whatsoever he doeth shall prosper ps 1 13 but not only were the people of israel to set their own hearts upon gods words but to command their children to observe to do all the words of this law this shows that moses had in mind in his exhortation not only this last song but also the whole law of god which he had rehearsed to them that day in thus setting then own hearts upon the word of god and commanding their children to do the same thejumhild can be avoided jby the prompt use of dr j d kelloggs asthma remedy which positively does drive away the attacks his last song ch 31 30 that sing all this night suffering andli is found in oh 32 144 a wonderful song all of which should be carefully read in connection with this lesson having spoken ail the words of this song in the ears of thi people v 44 realizing that tine sonr was not his own but from god as he ended it he said set your hearts unto all the words the capital of canada ttan this year always because of its beauty and its political interest on the routemaps of tourists to the dominion ottawa this year has the added attrac tion of being the city of the imperial economic conference of the british nations on the first occasion upon which the imperial conference has been held outside of ionrion the city of ottawa is located in the province of ontario on the banks of the ottawa a majestic river which joins the st lawrence near montreal about 115 miles eastward the ottawa rises hun dreds of miles to the northward drain ing a country of immense forest resources which has contributed materially to the vices in hills hall mr donald waldle of the second lme sent the free- press the other day an which they were soon to go over jordan to possess v 47 tx jehovah shows moses the land of ear of field com twelve inches in length promise 4852 and containing 752 grains moses having finished his work and mr spencer husband millwright had spoken all the word that god had given one of his feet painfully scalded in a bim to speak jehovah now commands leash at the tannery on saturday he bim to get up lno mt nebo where he js able to be about but has not resumed work it is reported that an experienced driller who has been operating at milton has been engaged by a number of local men to put down an oil well at crewsons corners last thursday j c blacklock thresher fractured local records with an unusually big days work on the farm of mr frank sayers nassagaweya in ten h6urs- he threshed 2000 bushels of oats and 140 pushels of wheat married traytjormulholland in str josephs church acton on september 24 1912 by rev father traynor brother of the groom assisted by rev father sullivan elora michael x trainer owen sound to mary agnes daughter of the late george mulhol- land esqueslng requisite on the farm every farmer and stockraiser should keep- a supply of dr thomas eclectrlc oil on hand not only as a ready remedy for ills in rhe family but because it is a horse and cattle medicine- of great potency as- a substitute ror sweet oil for horses and cattle affected by colic it far surpasses anything that can be administered v s bankers to visit jasper nationax park bankers from new york philadelphia and other cities of the eastern united states will arrive here september 20 to begin a tour of western canada the visit is a feature of their trip to the 58th an nual convention of the american bankers association which will be held in los angeles october 3 to 6 about one hundred convention del egates are expected to make up the group that will visit canada they will leave here by special canadian national train for saskatoon and calgary next on their itinerary are lake louise banff and edmonton the bankers will reach jasper national park september 23 and will spend two days there an extensive programme of sports sightseeing and social entertain ment centering around jasper park lodge will mark their visit and they will take an automobile trip to mount edith cavell vanc and vict will gr the party september 257 following a short stay in the british columbia cities they will visit seattle portland and various california- towns before reaching los angeles their homeward trip takes them across arizona colorado kansas and through pittsburg to new york was to die he went up into this moun tain because god bade him to do so he knew he was to die there ch 32 50 moses had earnestly desired to go over jordan to see the land ch 3 25 but god had refused ch 3 26 27 but what god now granted really met moses desire- he saw the land though he did not enter it the treason why moses was not permitted to lead the people into the land was because he had failed to sanctify gods wordy that prominence of thecanadlan capital in the industrial world ottawa is approx imately 400 miles northwest of new york and about 600 miles from washington the capital of the united states the city has a population of about 125000 and surrounding municipalities not in cluded in the corporation substantially increase that figure development at ottawa dates from the arrival of colonel by in 1826 with company of british royal engineers who came to build the rldeau canal a mili tary route of transportation linking the ottawa and st lawrence rivers he pitched his camp close to the spot where the beautiful chateau laurier which was the hom of the delegates to the ference during their slay in ottawa now stands around tmir camp grew the village of bjtown which by 1847 became it was enough to speak to the rock n incorporated town the name was and so he had smitten it and he had changed to ottawa in 1854 and three taken glory to himself that belonged to jehovah alone num 20 8 11 12 10 when we think that we are necessary to god then god sets us aside but moses had been exceedingly faithful for the most part and jehovth granted to him a wonderful view of the land he told moses that his death would follow upon that view num 27 13 centuries later moses did enter the land after all matt 17 5 the people knew as thsy saw moses ascending the mountain side that they would see him no more oh 33 1- 29 god showed moses the land in its full pxtent ri i1pnr is the atmo grains alone not enough in order fully to realize the opportuni ty which is his in marketing bacon hogs the farmer of the prairie provinces in particular must realize as a fundamental fact that grains alone are not enough to make good hogs where milk in some form is available it supplies the ideal protein supplement or balance to the ration but dn many parts of western canada in particular milk in any form is scarce in such cases tankage should be included in the meal mixture it is an ideal suppl ment and adds zest to the feed even when milk is available in abundance to make your homegrown feeds count you must feed a balanced ration and tankage is a good means to this end i blame in right place 11 the guest met his host in the garden and commented i say old chap who js that awful frump over there whjr thats my wife came the reply oh stammered the embarrassed guest i beg your pardon thats my mlaake oh no said the host easily its my mistake of that land that this might not require a miracle the glorious land was not shown to moses jto tantalize him but to cheer him when the faithful head of gods people is about to die the most cheering thing that can be shown him is the bright prospect that is before his people under a new leader moses heart swelled with joy as lie saw the magnifi cent prospect before the people he had so long and patiently led through tho wilderness in the midst of almost crush ing discouragements all regret that an other would lead them was swallowed up in the joy over what they were to enjoy cf num -11- 29 jehovah had promis ed this land to abrahams descendants between four and five hundred years had passed between the promise and the ful filment gal 3 17 ex 12- 20 gen- 47- 9 25 20 but the promise was sure though they had so long to wait for its fulfilment there are many promises of god that have been waiting much longer than that for fulfilment but they will all be fulfilled to th very letter some day tit 1 2 dx the death and burial of moses 34 58 death followed speedily after the vision cf acts 7- 5660 moses work was done and death was promotion he was alone with jehovah when he died his had been a solitary life and it closed with a solitary death cf ex 3 1 2 24 18 all those who were nearest to moses had already gone before num 26 64 65 20 1 20 28 he had seen the land and the people were about to enter why should he linger that he died just at the right time is evident from the fact that he died according to the word of the lord moses is called here by a very significant and honorable title the servant of jeho vah it was qod himself who gave moses this honorable title num 12 7 it was moses greatest claim to distinc tion that he was gods servant heb 3 5 we can hae a title better than even servant of the lord the friend of the lord and the child of god john 16- 15 1 john 3 2 moses had another distinction bestowed on no other man jehovah buried him wiih his own hands he kept the place of his burial concealed if known it might have been made a shrine god seemingly doesnt approve of building monuments for the dead moses lived to a great age his 210 years were divided into three periods of just 40 years each acts 7 2330 he abode in fulness of physical strength to the end this was the result of obedience to gods will and word ex 155 26 josh 14 1011 he had no disease be was picked as an ear fully ripe there were thlity days of weeping as an expression of respect and love a far better expression of love would have been obedience to the laws he left john 14 21 23 24 they had murmured against years later queen victoria selected the city as the capital of canada the beauty of ottawa is commented upon by every visitor the architecture cf its publicbuildings is appropriate to the dignity of a great nation the thirty miles of boulevards which encircle the city present an everchanging panorama of beauty rich farming country lies to the south and west immediately to the north rise the laurentlan mountains where fishing hunting and life in the open invlte the sportsman and adven turer at otarwa the river which gijies the city its name is augmented by two other important streams the rldeau and the gatlneau these three rivers afford al most inexhaustible supplies of electrical energy which is made available to the residents at a rate among the lowest in the world although ottawas importance in world affairs is due mainly to its political significance the city has also substantial other interests a recent ensus dis closes 208 manufacturing concerns in ottawa with an investment of approxim ately 60000000 the principal indus tries have to do with- lumber and paper products and with manufactures of wood iron and steel the tree stands on a slight knoll over looking its lake it is the most royal living thing of all the wilderness fit companion to the hills fit friend of the forest below and about it green deep waters fit sentinel and spokesman firs and spruces are gathered as a con- giegatlon and choir here too there- are many nobel heads lifted many anc ient trunks whose thick barks are mys terious with natures hieroglyphics but not one to equal the sliver fir where up ana over the vassal trees its white ws ever loftier symbol and rev- pward urge of life as with moonlight every brunch shimmers something of the night some mysterious essence of the softer hours cllngsto it even when the sun shines the peace the power and the majestic melancholy of midnight possess it looking upon it one thinks of the stars and of the ages that will suc ceed the sun it is never altogether quiet though the lower forest may testrandllstenr jljere is yetsome move ment in the crown of the fir and when all the air seems dead there steals down a flutter as if the tree were putting its secrets into prayer when thebreezes freshen it is the first to take up the song its voice swells deeper and its re sonant chords grow louder and always it can be heard like a thrumming viol leading the symphony of the trees it was old with the spaniards they passed under its shade when all the land was canopied by trees as old and as noble but it outlasted its generation new growths came and came again and yet the stately fir crowned its forest patriach and king what desires it had i cannot dream though i well jcnow that it could not have lived on without some sort of longing however far re moved from human hopes it is never silent never unaware of wind and weather night and day but with myriad lips praises something greater and more en during than itself it is yesterday over its roots is spread a broad expanse of brown loam where no grasses grow but only the aromatic needles fall year by year to make for it a bed where one day it will sleep stepping into the shadow of the fir one feels as if with a stride one had for all who prefer quality salada tea fresh from th gardens bridged the generations backward to far and heathen times there is something ietiie air here some occult influence sometntanglbie effluence as by some six h and unphyslcal sense but cannot translate into words it is as if uncon scious thought were here a something lss than personal with an instinct for an individual net as yet achieved were the greek legends altogether fabulius those cool impersonal things half body and half dream compact of moonlight and mans instinctive sense of something more in nature were they after all but manufactured poems or when before the age of conscious thought yet earlier races trembled in their caves and leafy dens filling their worlds with fears more deadly than the great beasts of the times were those vague and ghost ly awes but ignorance the product of the beastmansterrors of the night this animistic faith of which our scientific sophists wrl e t leader in newsprint exports according to a report just issued by the canadian government bureau of statistics the pulp and paper industry is canadas most important manufacturing industry heeding the list in 1931 for gross and net values of manufactured products as well as for distribution of wages and salaries in total capital in vested this industry is second only to electric light and power plants e manufacturing pulp pro- duced 3167960 tons valued at 84780- 819 and the 71 mills making paper ac counted for an output of 2611225tons newsprint paper made up 85 3 per cent cf the total reported tonnage of paper manufactured the canadian production ot sandard newsprint was 91 9 per cent greater than that of the united states during 1931 the exports of woodpulp from canada last year amounted to 622537 tons valu ed at 30056643 exports of paper and paper goods were valued at 111114042 these exports were made up chiefly of newsprint paper of which 2008240 tons valued at 107233112 went chiefly to the united states canadas exports of newsprint are now second only to her exports of wheat and ure greater- than the newsprint exports of the rest of the world canadian peaches best time tables u ax aotoh nad1ak n going daily except sunday 1007 1 daily 228 pjn daily except sunday 613 pm sunday only 800 pm the chicago fli tha here at 947 eastbound stops at george town at 955 p m j going wert daily except sunday 740 am daily except sunday 908 ajn dally except sunday 228 pm daily except sunday 640 pju sunday only 825 am sunday only 1035 pm so ter yourvoid lamp or lantern fmnew c x thats the big value you are offered for a limited time your old lamp or lanternany kind condition is worth j2l50 on the purchase of a new coleman any model you want with a coleman you can have the finest light for 1 a night up to j 300candlepowerofpure white brilliance easy to use clean safe dependable new values you can get a coleman for as litde as 750 and your old lamp see your local dealer ask him to demonstrate coleman lamps and lanterns if he is not supplied write us the coleman lamp and stove co lb rorontorrontar10 f lt20x1 y that mere philosophy can find is it as nowadays some say tout just a first step towalrd are manmade gods with woody thoughts our devotees of facts study the wcodjrfacts of brush and forest growth but they will be the first to ell you that life is not so found life meets with life and only thus is known rightly of old days our dim forebears trusted to the uvs their own lives vag uely sensed rlghty they peopled all the solitudes with growing souls of grow ing things sitting in the shadow of this hoary fir an eerie sense or companionship takes hold jof me 1 am not the only soul brooding here waiting for a trans- formation around the trunk or through it up from the grounded roots or down from the thin foliage there must be a brown face peering at me ah but that is only my human fancy in reality no companionship exlss and only the kinship jo travelers farapat on the dusty road of life no dryad of yester day dwells here over me the hellene gods are too youthful for this ancient trunk the old gods of pine and pin nacle are ofamore austere breed if i am to fancy the spirit of the fir i must twnkof the indians who worshipped dance in auspices of peel and dutferin it and of the mysterious j foe whose sous were even more closely akin to nature and of the hairy and silent men of the caves whom the trees impersonal spirit vaguely remembers arcadian magazine always kep douglas egyptlait-ljni- ment at hand ready to bring immediate relier to burns sores and felons stops bleeding at once prevents blood poison ing splendid fpr sore throat and quinsy did you ever stop to think by edson b walte shawnee oklahoma that sou should choose your merchan dise from the stocks of the home mer chants instead of from a catalogue it is the policy of the home city mer chants to keep pace with the demands of the people of the home city visible evidence tothat effect can be seen every where in purchasing merchandise it is always best to buy the best available the best is always advertised canadian grown peaches the greatest treat in the whole of natures larder are now reaching the market sunripened and juicy straight from canadas own rchards unlike the early seasonjadvertlsemcnts will give you the ln- peachesrwnlc have to je shi long distances and picked before they are properly matured those now on sale are ripened on the trees in the natural way and shipped to market when they are in their prime canadian peaches are among the finest hi the world evenly ripened large and juicy and always a favorite with every member of the house hold fonnicvoutshoultriiavebefore buying dollars spent in the home town work for the hopytown they not only earn a good returnfor their owners by thelr servlce but they continue to serve the community the only way you can be completely satisfied with the goods you buy is to buy them from uhe merchants of the home town brampton fair tuesday and wednesday september 27 and 28 ovejjt 3000 in prizes races 222 trot or pace 230 trot or pace running race potato race on horseback potato race for ladies on horseback peel and jdufferin regimental band in attendance fair night eastbound dally except sunday 600 ajn daily 935 am daily ioo pjn dally 425 pjn dally 555 pjn j dally 900 sundays and holidays only 800 pm westbound dally dally daily daily daily 915 am 1115 am 115 pjn 415 pjn 615 pm dally except saturdays 1015 pjn saturdays only 820 pjn saturdays only 1215 ajn stalfdard time xturllivjl i r life insurance policies to suit your needs family income childs thrift be tlrement income pension bonds endowment for protection in vestment business and savings a request for information places you under no obligation frederick l wright representative imperial xlfe assurance company acton ontario i savage co regiment martinramsey orchestra horseshoe pitching contest good prizes come and bring the fasdxtf j cadesky optometrist will visit acton on monday november 7 anyonesuffering from eyestrain defective vision or headache should not miss the opportunity of consulting this eyesight specialist appointments may be made with mr a t brown druggist consultation free office hours 9 a m tfll 4 p m whenyoubuy let the advertisements be your guide watches diamonds china glassware wedding and engagement rings guelph ontario ii wynakam st r theuoor of opportunity these smaltaas will open the door to whatever yon are seeking subscriptions for ah miigariw taken at the free pre offlo as 7 jcrk