. 11 RES = WHITE PINE White Pine is again quite reasonable in - price and when we say White Pine we mean White Pine, the Ottawa Valley kind that is lasting and easy to work. Allan Lumber Co. Pr ape, of porsopal pronoun; ks BE Phone 1042 . . . . Victoria Street with Elijah. 'They are defeatists of |= God's army. As one has said, "They | Syll{HHIINAOETI ORE AORRLA OOOO REE RRRRRRARLEN | A A A A A Ae have sky-lights but no windows." When oue begins to slump into this | depression he needs to go fishing or frolicking or to a big Christian con- vention, | © THURSDAY, JANUARY, 19, 19292. THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG. ~ A BIG MAN WITH THE BLUES N \ . The International Sunday School Lesson for January 22nd Is "Elijah's Flight and Re turn."--I. Kings 19:1-21. By William T. Ellis. back and forth in* his cage in the winter quarters of the big show. He | Although 'he had denied an arro- felt lonesome and restless, He stopped {gant kin and had waged al characters. After some practice the | shoes. He walks with a sort of slink.) {a while to watch the daughter tof his ed at with the ts of Ba : changes can be made very quickly. MAN: Ho hum. Here's a chance | trainer. She had wandered into the nt Mo ied d fi . Ce to rest a minute. My feet are about [300 and was sitting down not fap and had called downs:-fire from PROLOGUR run out, tramping the streets. It's [from Nuba's cage, playing with a heaven in vindication of Jehovah; Same story everywhere. Nothing | couple of frolicsome kittens, An alth his c If only an old park bench could talk, | for me £0 do, except sawing wood, or The lion wat ® aad a ough = spestaeyinr yictary How many tales 'twould tell; samet) lke that. No use KIND |shen sone khed enviously, "I wish had been crowned by a rain that Btories of Hope that is long #ince | yourself with work. The guys that IT He oh ey he mie broke a three years' drought, Kii- et the big salaries are the ones with | stroke my forehead and urs aud jah, the prophet of Israel, took to easy that sit around at their Ithirgs to me." {hig heels when a vengeful woman Tossed on life's stormy deep mahogany desks and read baseball | 1g wondered why # was that she got after him Drift along to this sandy shosl preferred to play with the kittens. ; To rest and drea: al "Maybe it's the noise I make," Nuba . Of course, there was more to his m--and sleep. SIppEE Sul! A reflected. 'Tm just as pretty and fiight than fea ,of embittered elp wanted" page. Reads Queen Jezqbel, whb threatened his (Enter boy of about twelve, whist- "3 hanics", "ex. | TUTTY as they are. It must be thay "1 ant , » ' Hing alone. with ba Bands' in hi | parenend snlemmen on whale the | Eo Sorin! Ae vale The mors Yet th' man who bad with BOY: Gee, but it's nice here in Thais ST own Sa, As that that must be the reason. Every stood arr apostate nation and hurled In own in se 2 r Kk = Sn- the park, with the sun shinin'- an wat) Ouotr TH vp rio os onl tune he roared the girl jumped, as if Se0rs a an SRety king, could not én for dinner. I'll be about as welcome |" So tuba decided to chan bia ways. dure this infuriat emalo devotee ing Xe ol: I Th sei as the cat that came back. ~ (Gets up. | He would be more gentlemanly. With of Baal. He was suffering the reac- Srna her fm gut TI | tol Bn 8 0 font RO MAI Ma tow From ah Tene sain. Beers | 11 over the Near Bast, and ape , . - i k rary i ' wana to" stud. when ths Sa cor | I, SPA Ler, 8 ded an orn | Vou he had ba trained soc on | Lo ToIKer, every worker in & lcially in Gilead, Eljehs homeland, to's nioe Rey 1k hey san Solus suit of clothes, and an out-of-shape | fierce as possible roaring and tossin great cause, can understand Elijah's one finds the caves of ancient Chris- #0 over and get a boat and fish or | PAL) his head, 50 that people Would be sure jmood. How often have men gone |tian hermits. I once examined one, | something. (Goes off. Enter boy of theo Seema Jie 1 remerohet prised by the daring of his trainer. out, spent and perspiring, from au- {cut out of solid granite, in the wilds | le R he sa di { ¢ v y | About sixteen, Slouching along, an 10.100 Ty bones.' Ora oon Bo Wonder the yir1 iby aval Num ditorfums wherein they have moved |of Kurdistan. We understand now- | unit cigarette, in his mouth. bis wat | Jigs, © S08 Mov Danes, (Sits down | Bat he would show ber. Then, large audiences to nobler levels of |adaya that this over.indivaietic BOY: Good old park bench. Don't $d park bench is about te uly plage Wi next day he was bauled out of |thought, only themselves to toss [conception of religion was wrong, ome nowadays. 'sa cage to go th his t Isle S B l v " Yow yl Io hard world, a hard world. Here I am, | that he might ova fn ge jsitepless upon hotel beds, in Jottures Oyen as Bi jak: wae wrong. From SE ok NAY a yogi DE | sitting on a park bench, and some of girl stood outside of the I |Of sell-roproaches and consciousness |the first, the religion of Jehovah has | De Tamil ae He, All the me, the boys I went to school with are |cage to watch. "Now." thought Nuba, of faflure and unfitness! The expe-; been social and active. "What doest 10 £0 to work at something. Its ro oang around in thelr automobiles. | "is my chance to show her my resi {rience is as common as great serv- thou here, Elijah?" was God's ques- Some peop! nk. nature." - | . ras inns a "a | Se telling him 1 ought 30 lok around In pockets and brings out some loose go the trainer came to the part Joe: that be was HOt geif souipiseent {Liou} IWPIFHE, "What about the to go into. No use rushing into any- change.) . Hmmm. "Bout-gnough for | where he shook his whip at Nuba, the after his mighty feat removes Elijah | work that waits to be done? Here a couple of decent meals tomorrow, fold lion, instead of roaring and, years from the class of "popular" preacher |yqu are hiding your talent in a nap- or lecturer, who hes been cFnically |kin. There are two kings and a | described as "A pillar of brass by {prophet to be anointed, and a deal day, and a pillar of gas by night." |of first-class prophet-work to be [Such a mood as Elijah's is the price done, and here you are off in the that a man must pay for th posses- {desolate mountains, mooning end {sion of a prophet's soul. Jesus Him- | moping!" . self had kindred hours. | THE JUNIOR BRITISH WHIG BIGGEST LITTLE PAPER IN THE WORLD 8CA005 HUMOR PLAY STUDY WORK SPORTS | = | ome Tajent Playsg [Cove se: vam: | | NUBA, THE GENTLE LION Nuba, the big circus lion, paced ON THE PARK BENCH turn up. You ncver can tell. (Goes Scene: A. bench in a park. " One] oUt. Enter middle-aged man in seedy boy takes the parts of the Aifferent| clothes, old slouch hat, spiritual, consecrated: and yet dis} trustful of the Church and of fellow disciples, and sure that there is lit- tle spirituality 'left except their own. They pray much, but they are more absorbed in the faot that they are on their knees than in .the exalt- | ed truth that God is on His throne. They have Become fenced in by a WI HIE Jost, And Despair--it knows him well. Year in, year out, the many wrecks In France a prize of about $5,000] is awaiting the builder of the first helicopter to rise vertically from the ground to a height of 30 feet and de- iscend safely. Some men are to be trusted and some others are not in the trust, life DAVID SCOTT Plumber Plumbing and Gas Work a spec falty., All work guaranteed. Ad- dress 145 Frontenac Street. Phone 1277. = SSS REDUCTIO ON ALL PORTABLE LAMPS 10% REDUCTION ON ELECTRIC IRONS AND TOASTERS Hing a Shink | but not for & bed tonight. |ing up, rubbed his head against his Is oy i, (During this "scene the lights have | trainer's legs affectionately, trying tq boys. Som AY | been gradually fading out.) Wonder {make a purring noise, The trainer -- which is harder, the bench or the | looked dumbfounded, . ground. Td get rheumatis on the | "Goodness, father" said the girl, ground, though. It'll have to be the | what do you want to frain that tooth-' J bench. ¢ up on bench, as last | less old beast for? . He n't any lights fade.) more pep than a kitten!" ' She looked : at Nuba in disgust, and the bewil- TODAY'S PUZZLE dered lion Rung-his-head and slunk NEED, CIDA, MALE, NIEM back into a corner. When each group of letters has In Flight From a Woman. i been rearratiged to form the proper | words, these words may be arranged in a word square. 'Answer to yesterday's: Boll, lake, evening, give, even, nab. etme Eatihy on the Street A boy or girl who goes along the street eating a banana, or munching peanuts or candy, is being claseed by the ple he passes as "lll-bred." ¢ are places for eating and the street is not one of them, -- The Test of the Mountain. There were still seven thousand in Israel who had never bent the knee {to Baal, as the Lord reminded Eli- |Jah, Seven thousand and Elijah | thought he was alone! How ab- surd our caterwauling conceit must seem to heaven! God never leaves Himself without his seven thou- sands. There arg myriads of times seven thousand faithful ones scat- tered over the world today; and more of them are in our own com- munity than perhaps we, in blind egotism, have been able to see. Amid all the depressing talk from the host of Christian Jeremiahs that fills our land today, we have need to keep in mind God's reassurance to Elijah. On the mountain Elijah was given a demonstration that corrected the impression he had evidently carried from Carmel. There God had vindi- cated Himself by fire from heaven. But the normal expression of the Divine will is not spectacular; and God expresses Himself in quiet ways and through individual understand- ing. First came the wonder of the craggy gides of the mountain; then an awesome earthquake; and then a fire; but God was not in these. "And after the fire, @ still, small voice:"" and God was in it, speaking to His servant. Not by mighty organizations or conventions; not. by magnificent demonstrations such as the Inter- church World Movement; but by the "still small voice" of God speaking to the individual heart does the kingdom of heaven come. And in world affairs, it is by the quickened and enlightened conscience and res- olute purpose of men and women, rather than by the elaborate func- [tions of statecraft, that the era of righteousness and peace is to be | brought to pass. What one bash- ful Sunday School boy is now re- solving in his heart may possibly mean more to mankind that the in- | vention of the submarine and air- | Di S\ | With the bitter and deadly hate {of Queen Jezebel to spur him on, the | hardy wilderness dweller performed ia wonderful flight. He had outrun | King Abeb's chariot on the fifteen. {mile ride from Carmel to Jezreel. Then, at the word of the queen (who belonged to that dominant | group of women who have ruled {kings as if they were abject slaves) {Elijah set out on 'the ninety-five - {mile flight to Beersheba, on the des- The Late Mrs. Bower, Keeley, Wolfe Island; Mrs. Herbert Jere eige the a ae Spaffordton, Jan. 16.--Mrs. Wil- |B. McAdoo, Kingston; Mrs, Herbert land Jui British soldiers in their Ham Bower passed peacefully away |W. Halferty, Sydenham; John I. eam algn AGATA the Turks. Whe at the home of her daughter, Mrs. | Bower, Sydenham; Harvey W. Bow- |. vas srvant with the ph ysica' H. W. Halterty, Spaffordton, on Jan, (er, Kingston. Ee van h Biya 11th ser an ines of two months stamina to shave the JOP et's rapid duration. Her husand, the late Wil- Women, who are asking for prov- ume. lo as . dersons Epon liam Bower, predeceased her four- |incial franchise, have been definitely Fil a BY ap son, and that he teen years ago. The funeral services | notified that the Quebec government [EO a the. proph prophet Jonah. were conducted at the home on Fri- | will not bring in a bill. Utterly spent, Elijah went off day at 2 pm., Rev. Mr. Leach and : wh |{alone--in our hlack hours we want | Rev. :G. ord Taving charge of Do hot suid {no companion--and, reclining under tehin ee (a juniper tree, or a broom plant, Ing, br | " . ie io 4 prayed to die. "It is enough: now. surgical oper. |O Lord, take away my . life! he a Jim Howly says A fellow should always Say "Nay" in a Hoarse whisper. Willle Winner says that his father says bald-headed men always come out on top. "@ /@\ or2 nourishment in one cup of "Ovaltine" than there is in 3 EGGS : or in 7 cups of Cocoa "Ovaltine" is the ideal beverage for every member of the home. Healed by Hood tions For two years I suffered greatly from blue veins on my leg. They started with a little sore that grew worse, . larger, more painful till it extended around my whole ankle. I decided to take Hood's Sarsapar- lla to purify my blood, with Hood's Medicated. Soap to wash the sore, and Hood's Olive Ointment to heal it. It was soon apparent I was on the right course, for as the result of faithfully taking the Sarsaparilla, the sore dim- inished and finally disappeared. i heartily recommend (hese remedies to all suffering from similar troubles. Mrs John Peterson, Detroit Har-| 'Woodrum, California; bor, Wis, \ . | Brawley, Flint, Mich.; Mrs, W. J. To the busy father and mother it gives health and an increase of str and vitality. To the children it supplies the body building elements necessary to insure sturdy limbs and cheeks aglow' with health. OVALTINE TONIC FOOD BEVERAGE "Ovaltine" is supernourishment in the form of « delicious beverage. It is prepared from Nature's tonic foods--ripe barny-roals creamy milk, fresh eggs, and is flavored with cocoa. , Now at all Canadian druggists 50c, 85¢, and $1.80 Tanne Jt Se ratte BRITISH--and used throughout the Empire. A. WANDER LIMITED, (Canadian Office) 27 Frost St. E., Tereate were conveyed to the vault at Syden~ d.usnters and two : Mrs, J. H. and afford lasting benefit. 60c bo: "There are no physical the services, after which the remains ham to await burial in the family pot at 'Sydenham. "Deceased leaves five ti uired Dr. Chase's Ointment will relieve you ab ones | CF ied: Mrs. D. A. alers, or Edmanson, Bates a Co, Linivetk | bod "» Kipli Hany HEY as. Sample Box free il you mention this ies," says ipling; lor sensations seldom tell us the real @: vaper and enclose 2¢. stamp to pay postage. truth. Had Elijah not n spent and weary and beaten, 'he would have been exultant that day. He thought he needed to die: what he really needed, and what the angel gave him, was a good sleep and a square meal, repeated the second time. 1 seldom bother my head about {the nature and work of angels; but {I am sure that Elijah's juniper-tree angel belonged to that goodly tom- pany of wives and mothers and sis- ters whe feed the preachers and the prophets, and make comfbriable homes for them; and in general, minister to the Lord by ministering to His servants. It was the simple A A RA EA AAPA Mater Srey tbat SA ena cakes / 7 ~~ | every Province in Canada we have bought, : Municipal or Railway Bonds guaranteed decades AEmilius Jarvis & Co., Limited, year by year, confidence and in clientele. From ocean to ocean the mail, the tel and r or rn commended until a th gh examination of the assets, debts and sinking underwritten and sold Government, by the Government. During three has grown in public and expurt Bedouin meal, of flat wheat and water, that was served Elijah: but we may be sure the bread was well cooked! A Personal Glimpse of Sinai. Green amid thé granite is the tra- ditional cave on Mount Sinai, or Mount Horeb, to which Elijah fled from Beersheba; and green is the spot in my memory. The journey is less than two hundred miles, but Elijah spent forty days, like Moses and our Lord, in his retirement and wanderings. The figure recalied the forty years spent in the wilderness by the Children of Israel. It was natural that so deeply reli- gious a spirit as Elijah should turn to the, Mount of God for a refuge. But God pity the world if there are not a host of persons listening to the still, small voice. DO YOU SMOKE TOO MUCH ? There are. many men on whose heart and nervous system tobacco produces the most serious results. It causes palpitation, pain in the heart, irregularity of its beat, makes the hands tremble, sets the nerves on edge, causes rtness of breath, and loss of sleep. To counteract this demoralizing influence on the heart and nerves there is no remedy to equal Milburn's. Heart and Nerve Pills plane, or the Paris peace convention. | They make the heart beat strong | FURS daily pour into this house th 1 wie know tat with us their e. \ This nation-wide business connection has been established by rigid adherence to an inflexible rule of "safety first" in all investments recom- mended to clients. No bond issue is ever accepted and steady, restore tone and vigor to | the nerves, and remove all the evil | results caused by the tobacco. | Mr. Frank Lutes, 71 Terrace Hill | St., Brantford, Ont, writes:--*1 had | been troubled with palpitation of the | heart for a number of years, and by funds, revenues, assessment values, borrowing powers, legality of authority, validity of agree- ments and all other facts pertinent to the security of the principal, has been made. When we recommend an investment you can be abso. lutely assured that it is a safe security to buy. orders of clien| are The desert has a grandeur of its own; and so has the deep forest but | the majesty and awesomeness of the rocky ravines and peaks of Sinai would impress even the pagan mind Gourdier's 1922 Investment Situation simple or as it has been in 1921, Boy id We believe this will feature of the situation in 1922, or be bought to in 1922, and that We believe good times are here, that business will revive, that industries will take on new life we will see advances in prices of all good securities, Our advice, therefore, is to buy now. In our list we have a large variety of guaranteed railway bends and Provincial and municipal bonds of varying maturities and at yields that are very attractive. Full particulars of any security will be furnished on mail, telegraph Write for the Investment Guide. Before You Invest, Consult Us. Emili BN uSJarvis & o INVESTMENT BANKERS. with a sense of the presence of the supernatural. There it seems espe- cially true that "Nature is the art of God." Only the few travellers who, on camel-back, bave under- gone the rigors of the journey, kaow how soul-hushing are the sublimitiss of these bare crags. From the height of Jebel Musa--7000 feet-- one studies a panorama unmatched in all natural scenery. From the simple Greek stone chapel which marks the site of the Theophany, where Moses bowed be- fore the visibie presence of the In- vistble, I have looked down half way to the base, where grow, in a stony plain, the few cypress' trees that mark the Ohapel of Elsjah, buiit over the cave where tradition says the fleeing prophet prostrated him- self and listened to the voice of Je- hovah. 3 morbid mood simple conceit and self- centeredness may seem harsh; but that is the truth. Everybody knows this type of Christian, sengitive, spells it would bother me a lot. The doctor told me it would stop on me sometime if I did not cut out to- bacco. When I would get a spell my heart would pound, and I would break out in a perspiration, sud get 80 weak I would have to sit right night I would wake up and my heart would be going, 1 should say, about 120 beats a minute. About three years ago I got a box of Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills, took them, and found that they did the job. I 20 pounds in weight." mailed direct on receipt of price by 'The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toron- to. Ont. down and quit my work; also in the if am feeling fine and have gained over | Price, 60c. a box at all dealers, ") il BROCK STREET Absolute Evidence in Favor of Ground Cylinders All high grade automobile eugines manufactured in this country as well as in Europe have their cylinder bores finish. ed by grinding. Some of the American cars that might be mentioned are: Apperson Brewster Cadillac Cunuingham Dorris , Franklin _ Haynes Mercer Templar Holmes Packard Winton In fact, 84% of all the manufacturers of pleasure cary use engines with ground cylinder bores, and 91% of the com- mercial motors are ground. Heald' Machines are used ex: clusively. Automobile owuers we have one of these Heald Cylinder Grinding Machines, and can guarantee first class work. Ground Crlinders is a selling poist With many emrs. Automotive Grinders Corner of -- pg bran 0 Streets. Peerless Plerce Arrow Rolls Royce Standard Stevens Duryea Stutz Hudson Kissel LaFayette Lincolr Locomobile Marmon