Daily British Whig (1850), 14 Oct 1920, p. 9

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THURSDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1020. THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG. Country Boy, City Man, World Loafer; SSERAT:S neat Concentrated Beef Cubes Fortify Body Against Chills. => Oxo ede Gissclved in a cup o water a endi i take before ys in the cold or | Phone. 2050, TIRES COMING DOWN the season out of it. "THE HOME OF THE MAXOTIRE® 284 Ontarip Street : | The International Sunday School Lesson for October 17th is the hardest | "Jesus Begins His Ministry."--Matthew 4 : 12-25, ; ; , damp, or on ng in, if one feels ' ~~ thin S By William T. Ellis. | the lightest s =" g Fighting In the Holy Land keeps spirit and body, by teaching, preach-! nouris and ° easily Galilee the French and the natives | about the creating of a new party, , generating heat thas the sys- are at death grips. War is on the | the Christian party, with leaders and A tem requires. ! : Sit | Oxo cubes--in tins of four and | i ble. Not yet are Christian powers | kingdom of heaven. rilling pos- mormng to heat the water | ready to come nto subjection to the |aibliities of a ew party In the poli- for washday. Use Rinso Evening Footwear 3 pro- travellers away this winter. Up in |ing and healing; for the Master set , Oxo acts a8 a fuel in the D i increase amid the scenes of the Bi- | members all pledged to put first the | 0 not get up early in the ten cubes--have endless possibil- ities. For soups, sa At Night -- Soak the clothes in the rich, bubbly Rinso suds. Morwing--Rinse them out that's all | and wash the clothes in cold water. Youwill save time and the vost of heat- ing water. Your washing will be done sooner and your clothes will be more clean if you use Rinso --the pure soap granules | one Leader who can bring peace not {only to His homeland, but also to | the world. Nevertheless, peace will be found ultimately mot in the coun- sels of statesmen in Europe, but in the words of Jesus spoken in the ngw-harried Land which He loved and in which He lived. Hold fast to the-faith that only Christ can pacify and save this dis- traught world. He is the only Hero ties and life of today, the dlstinctive- ly Christian party, committed to the programme of Christ, are suggested by this thought. No sooner had the Lord begun His work than He began to recruit fel- low workers, Hes the loneliest of men, yet was master of the art of co-operation, It was unthinkable in Him to dispense with human fellow- | ¥ ship. The one title Jesus gave Him- savory dishes and meat do all tha } and | oddments for new, delicious dishes. There is nothing better than Oxo for building sturdy boys and girls, Fashion's tates in Ladies' Kvealng Footwear. Handsome Slippers and amare of style and Many new and exclue sive things to imterest young wemen. Women con find repay Evenlag of Man, . 'Vootwear of genuine For Ladies --as harmless as pure water itself. Get a package at sour Groser's LEVER BROTHERS LIMITED, TORONTO Rinso Ta] 3: OF TAR & COD - LIVER OIL Coughs, Colds, Grippe, Bronchitis, hooping Cough, Asthma, Re THIEU'S SYRUP is a sovereign tonic combini MATHS perties of TAR and the strengthening virtues of COD LIVER OIL. Lg Colds, when neglected or badly treated give rise to consequences of Suchagrave character that you should t risk using inferior preparations. MATHIF U'S SYRUP is the only genuine remedy whose se- ~ putation has to crop up many imitations of doubtful value. ON SALE EVERYWHERE = Said Mrs, C~------ to Mrs, Te One bleak and cold and day, "You know, my dear, this time of yeas Is hard on folks. - Of health and comfort, 't would be fine, But it seems we can't, in such a clime." "Well, do you know', smiled Mrs, T= "I used to think this time of year, Meant colds and sickness always near, ts aay da Q . Fou hos Men Weanly cvecg day. ust the picture of health and always neat) 'ell, she was told by a doctor friend She'd never On good wool 'Cectee' kind, Made by Turnbull's of Galt, I think she said. An advertisement somewhere for an airing stormy, chill day--- garments, They're the finest of -grade underwear, And the thriftiest, women who care, Know that it to buy none but the best; Don't you we'd do well to give them a test?" 0:0.'0.8 0 so 00 00 00 : - "CEETER" for Jadits is made with low cut neck and we i wad TE "OEETEE"™ ta knitted on very fine necdics--this very waren, soft and light. doctor advise £2 wear wool next the skin: pms - Lon resine yon oent tho Shin: body, keeps out safeguards your health, - Why mot try i this winter? snow or frost--- in truth, are worth twice their first cost. ' "THE PURE WOOL UNDERCLOTHING THAT WILL NOT SHRINK "The Woollen Underwear without m-- SY os Sold Ay he bent deniers MEEERERRRE Introduction + of American breeds vestock pou nto th ; a is to be aided by the use of motion picture films purpose by the U ment of agriculture, | States depact: part: hi fore, every Incident of His life, every phase of His background and experience, and every aspect of His teaching is to be looked upon as of present interest. While it is impor- tant to know international affafrs to-day, it is more important to know the universal Christ. After the sol- | treated, baffled, from the field, the {men and women who know Christ will come to the fore. So it is real education, real wisdom, to familiar- ize ourselves with the mind of the Master. Reared as a country boy, Jesus became a city man. Living as an integral part of the lfe of a pastoral and agricultural people, He was Himself a skilled mechanic. The friends of fishermen (while I was watching the oltve-skinned, black- eyed, beautiful boys of Tiberias dis- porting themselves in the water last summer, my thoughts, of course, turned to another Syrian Boy, look- ing just like them, who used to trudge across the nls from Naz- areth to go swimming in this same lake), Jesus was also the confrere of scholars and a'teacher in the synago- gue, In The Home Town of Jesus. What a vindication the centuries have brought, that now the very Capernaum synagogue in which Jesus once taught has been excavated, and made a tourist sight, not becguse of its architectural beauty, but simply because'it is a relic of the home town Of Jesus, All that the world knows or cares about the cosmopolitan city of Capernaum, at the head of the Lake of Galilee, is that Jesus once lived and taught and ministered there, There is a sort of defeatist propa- ganda in "some quarters which re- gards the present-day city as a well- nigh hopeless field for Christianity. Some persons even look upon the city as a sort of modern anti-Christ. They look to the country and the small town as the hope af the Church. This craven spirit overlooks the first fact of the present Lesson, which is that Jesus began His ministry in a big city, the metropolis of His neighbor- hood, a pagan, wicked city, Into the midst of these adverse conditions, Jesus projected His personality and His message and His mission. There He lived and preached and began His work of building up the kingdom that should be universal. 1s it any wonder that high hearts and heroic, eager to follow in the footsteps of Jesus, adventure the great modern cities, with all of their formidable- ness? A-- Dare The Laymen To Do It? Big city newspapers are read over a radius of many hundreds of mileg; which is one reason why the exam- ple of Jesus should be emulated to- day, in striking for the cities as the centér of evangelism. The strategy of such a campaign is obvious. With an unprecented call for a message that will salt and save our world, is not the hour ripe for men who, Jesus fashion, will launch out into the very maelstrom of our problems with an evangel of salvation? I am not suggesting merely the building of more churches of the creation of addifional ecclestical committees and officials; the land has already too many or all these. Nor have I in mind any. money-raising project. The simple procedure model- led on the practice of Jesus at Ca- pernaum, would be for self-support- ing'laymen, to whom the World has come, to carry the Evangel, by ton- gue and pen and practice, tn the great cities. This is the sort of "laymen's movement" now needed. It' would have no salaried officers and no pre- tentious organization. It would re- move the taint of commercialism from evangelism. Calling for peni- tence and prayer, rather than for money, this ministry would be the simple, insistent, many-sided affirma- tion of the external truth that only Christ can deliver our world; and that discipleship to Him is the first of all duties, 'With straining eyes, the whole 'world is looking for a Deliverer and a Champion and & Prophet, who will save our time. Everybody who thinks laments the lack of great spiritual leadership. Editors, business men, professional men--plain /people of all walks perceive the urgency of our need for a new who can deliver humanity. There- |self, out of all the many that He {diers and the diplomats have re-! wears, was "Son of Man." He stressed His identity with people. Even His divine kingdom He made dependent upon human faithfulness. So He called His first disciples from their nets on the lake He loved. Happily, they were men with ears to hear, and wisdom to put first things first. Their day's catch was less important than belng cancht themselves in the net of be ty. They left all-----and found all. We are struck by the truth that Jesus did not abolish the calling of His disciples: He, elevated it, Fishers of fish became fishers of men. That is the wise Master's way. ! Teachers of knowledge in His disci- pleship become teachers of wisdom and life. Writers become propa- gandiats for the Kingdom of Hea- ven. Merchan.s become traffickers in brotherhood. Farmers grow a har- vest of life for the heavenly garner. | Mechanics become builders of living temples for the worship of the In finite Father. Housekeepers become home-makers for the entertainmen and service of the Guest of Bethany Every calling and every characte is lifted up to a diviner level whe: it enters into discipleship to th transforming Christ of whom Fred: erick Lawrence Knowles sings: "Closest to men, Thou pitying Son 2 Po not suffer another day with jtohing leed ing, or Protrud - ing Piles. Nc surgical oper a --- Al ell tion required . "s Ointment will relieve you at once As lasting benefit 60c. a box; all | dealers, or Edmanson, Bates & Co. Li ., Limited, | 'oronto. Sample Box free if you mention this ee Do to pay hanies | a ENTE To Tp And thrilled from crown to foot With fellowship, ! Yet most apart and strange,, lonely as God,-- Dwell in my heart, remote and Ine timate One! Srother of all the world, I coms to Thee! "Gentle as she who nursed Thee at her breast (Yet what a lash of lightning on Thy tongue To scourge the hypocrite and Phar-| isee!)-- Nerve Thou mine arm, O meek, O Mighty One! Champion of all who fail, I fly to Thee! i 'O man of sorrows, with the wound- ed hands,-- Tor chaplet, thorns; for throne, a pagan cross; owed with the woe and agony of time, et loved by children and the feast- ing' guests,-- bring my suffering, joyful heart to Thee. 'haste as the virginal lily on her stem, 't in each hot, full pulse, each tropic vein, ore filled with feeling than the flow'r with sun; No anchorite,~hale, sinewy, warm with love,-- I come in youth's high tide of bliss to Thee. 'O Christ of contrasts, infinite para- dox, 2 et life's mony, rail strength, pure passion, meek austerity, nd the white splendor of these darken'd years,-- lean my wondering, wayward heart on Thine." explainer, solvent har- = dmc : FOR HAR VESTING: MILL FErps: FEED, CREAM OF TH BE WEST FLCUR. "CASH AND CARRY" 25 Brock Street a I LLL LT Ri SET TI RT NT PP PA SP distinction that will sil their heart's desire. $6.00 up to $12.00, J. H. Sutherland & Bro. THE HOME OF GOOD SHOES THE WHITE STORE WE HAVE IN STOCK FULL LINE OF CHOICE GROCERIES, OVERALLS, SMOCKS AND LEATHER MITTS BAMPSON FEED, BRAN, SHO RTS, MONARCH SCRATCH United Farmers' Co-Operative Co., Ltd. Ee LL RELLY, ET TIP GR. Maple Loaf (plain dial) $3.25 'The lowest - priced Ingersoll, and boys whe want to buy time- kosping service at lowest cost. Maple Leaf Radiolite, 34.00 The lowest-priced Radiolite. All the value of the Loaf plus the ability to tell you the time in the dark --at 7¢ cents extra. The 34-hour-a-day watch. Low-priced, yes; but of smart appearance NGERSOLLS, famous for the low prices at I which they are sold, art not enly the strongest and hardiest watches made--but they're as seemly and smart in appearance as you could wish. Why even the Maple Leaf-- $3.25 --the low- est-priced Ingersoll, is really. handsome, No thicker than watches that cost a whole lot more, with good lines and a dial thatis simple and artistic. Then when you move up to the Waterbury at $7.00 you find a small--twelve-size -- jeweled. watch of distinction and charm, still thinner than the Maple Leaf and with refimement of finish "and that pleases the most critical eye. As for Reliance --*the Ingersoll with a college education" -- he's an aristocrat. Slim, seven- ou pull out of your pocket not only to telt * time by, Lon to exhibat to your' friends. Yer this slender, patrician timepiece costs but $9.25 in nickel case, $14.50 in gold filled. There are many other Ingersolis--the Eclipse, a thin watch at $4.75: and its twin, the Eclipse Radiolite that tells time in the dark; price, $5.50; the Midget Radiolite, $6.25, for women, a "cutie" watch that a especially to the femi-~ nine taste; the Wrist Radiolite at $6.75; and the Radiolite Two-in-One, $4.25, 2 Maple Leafina 'case that makes it into a desk or bureau clock which, Nike all Radiolites, "tells time in the dark." All these Ingeriolls possess the faithful, sturd time-keeping qualities that have made Ingersoll a synonym for scout. perforance u all sorts of conditions, and all these Ingersolls also have the looks, the pleasing and the refinement which upset fogic that "you can't have everything." You get everything in an I i an ible. It is possible of the huge number of 1 sales watches a year. Get your Ingersoll soday. ROBT. H. INGERSOLL & BRO, $94 3. Cotharine St. X, Montreal ersoll --and you jeweled, with bridge movement, Reliance 'is the - nd .

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