| mvnspaY, sox 2, 1002 THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG. ------ ee ee. imi TT ---- etter rape -- ee ett rt ett eee ee Ee ---- GREAT SLAUGHTER [ees OF : Boots & Shoes BOOTS and SHOES | fis FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY ALSO MEN'S AND BOYS' CLOTHING. GIRLS' BOOTS Great Value JETT, Boots and Shoes The Entire Family Slaughtered Out! LADIES'. OXFORDS Latest styles, best makes ODD SIZES OF LADIES' BOOTS Sale - 79 Pr. BOYS' BOOTS Wonderful Value Sale $2.49 Pr. MEN'S BOOTS Blucher Cut--Reg. $5.00 Sale Sale $2.98 Pr. MEN'S SUMMER BOOTS Tan Canvas, with Lea- ther Soles. Sale - $2.29 Pr. BOYS' SUITS In Tweeds Sale $5.45 BOYS' YOUNG BLOOMERS All Sizes $1.29 MEN"S SUITS Newest Styles Sale $10.95 SALE STARTS FRIDA FOLLOW THE CROWDS OF TH 347 KING STREET arwp MEN'S FINE SHIRTS All Sizes 99¢ Each MEN"S SUITS All Sizes--Great Value Sale $14.95 Sale 2.49 Pr. MEN'S UNDERWEAR Oxford Knit Balbriggan 59¢ Garment This is a Snap ! OVERALLS In Blue with White Stripe Sale $1.25 Pr. Y, AT 9 A.M. THWARTING BEAUTIFUL PLANTS | 3 The International Sunday ¥The Second Quarterly Revie School Lesson for June 25 is w."--Psaim 65: 1-13. By William T. Ellis. No paper in this country has pub- lished the story of a recent dra- matic and almost incredible 1nci- 'dent from Greece; which I find in a foreign periodical; and which so vive Jddly conveys the point of the past Shree month, Sunday School Lessons that I summarize it her, 2% In the village of Spilio, in west- ern Macedonia, dwelt in direst poy< #rty, a Greek father and mother, With a son and daughter. At thir- teen, the boy George emigrated to America, where he prospered from the first, sending to his parents a - > * Pain in the Loins © Driven Out Quickly That dragging, wearying sort of Pain makes life a misery to many ople. This pain is due to a pas- Rive inflammation of the adjacent ue. Because every drop rubs in, use it penetrates so deeply, iline gives a wonderful result. 'More powerful because five times Stronger, more penetrating because it , kes through soft tissue, more ing to pain, Nerviline Liniment should be always on hand. Sold rywhere in large 35 cent bottles. monthly remittance. After fifteen years, the young man, grown weal- thy, decided to return home, carry- ing with him a large amount of money. He arrived in Macedonia in early April of this year, and pro- ceeded into the country, first visit- ing on the way his sister,.who had married and removed to a village a [short distance from the old home. To'*her thé brother brought rich gifts. In their happiness, brother and sister concoeted a surprise for - the parents-- a story-book deception that would prolong home-coming Joys. It was arranged that the re- turned exile should announce him- self as a friend of the son, bearing a gift; In order to test whether the father and mother would recognize him after fifteen years, in which time he Had grown from boyhood to manhood. The ruse worked. The stranger went to the old home, saying that the son in America had commis- sioned him to bear a gift of twenty- thousand drachmae to the father and mother. As expected, he was Dot recognized, but was received for 1 Sowards Keep Coal | ad Coal Keeps Sowards all kinds of Cut Wood PHONE 155. UPTOWN OFFICE: McGALL'S CIGAR STORE. PHONE 811. Some of the attractive features of a driscoe Light-Weight Touring Car which we are now offering: -- Non glare lens. Seg ro ~e A value in the automobil ANGLIN BROS. ; A strongly built Car w A quiet-running motor. Low Gas consumption, | ith seven inch frame. ¥ Smart pleasing body lines. Easy riding and comfort due to long springs. rice several hiindred dollars below its actual e market, Bay Street, Kingston, lj EE e------ oh nh what he purported to be. The vis- itor reifshed the strategem so keen- ly that he decided to postpone until morning the revelation of his ident- ity. After an evening of happy talk he retired to sleep. Such a lovely story should have a beautiful ending. But the peas- ant father and mother were sorbid and avaricious. The stayéd up talking over the great wealth in the fat wallet of this exuberant stranger, Why be content with only twenty thousand drachmae, when they might possess themselves of the father and mother, with a hatchet and an axe, slew the guest while he slept, and robbed Wim of his money called the next morning, that they had slain their only son, who had brought home his all in order to make them prosperous and happy! The remorse-stricken mother straightway committed suicide, and the father is in jail, awaiting trial for murder. As It Might Have Been. Small wonder that the plain peo- ple of Greece are athrill with hor- ror over this Arabian Nights tale en- acted in their midst. Terrible as was the tragedy, it really personifies the experience of the ancient kingdom of Judah. God had promised and planned wonderful things for His chosen people. All the lavish bounty of a Father's providence was prepar- ed for them. Unique among the na- tions of time, the special object of Divine love and affection, the Jews were to have the fulfilment of their dearest dreams and desires. Nevertheless, this ingrate people thwarted all the beautiful plans of Jehovah for their welfare. > They spurned his prophets, flouted his word, and supplanted his worship by heathen idolatries. Everything that could minister to the profit and pride and pleasure of the people had been provided by the loving care of the God of Abraham; yet the Jews Preferred the short-sighted and im- mediate rewards of 'selfishness and carnality and the fashions of their neighbors. Reluctantly, Jehovah sunished the people and extinguish- | ed the seif-governing nation. While we muse, as millione have ,done for ages past, upon the trag- edy of the Jews, who are & people without a country, we may irly turn from their plight thredghput the centuries to a consideration of what they might have been had they kept faith with their divine King, Judah would have remained great and godly, a missionary nation to save the world. The Jews would uave been spared centuries of mis- ery and obloquy. Instead of being hounded from land to land, they would have been honored as the | spiritual leaders of the race. Afraid To Be 'Different" Nobody has to look deeply into the whole store of this visitor? So the --only to find, when the daughter | [ues and downs, and final collapse, {of the Jewish natfon which we have | been studying for three months to jperceive an outstanding lesson for jour own time. There is peril for j the nation that goes back on its | highest destiny and mission. To fail | to be one's best self is as calamitous {for a people as for a person. In tons grave hour in national history--so much graver than most citizens know--Iit is important that we learn from ancient Judah to hold fast to what 'is highest and holiest in our heritage. This preeminently is a lesson for Christian patriots. There is nothing obscure or com- plicated about the case of Judah and the. cause of its downfall. The Jews simply did not have nerve enough or sense enough to be their best selves. In the face of temptations quite like those which confront every Young person out in the big world, they simply "fell down." They lack- ed courage to be loyal to their truest heritage. They did not dare to. be "different" from their heathen neighbors. It is the 'immemorial Story of a crowd sinking to the level of its lower elements, rather than rising to the heights of its fin- est members. We have a parallel to-day to the debased paganism that surrounded monotheistic Irael or Judah. A tide of sorbid materialism from continen~ tal Europe has swept over the Unit- 23 Frais and Canada since the war. Old world standards of personal chasity, of the pursuit of pleasures, of business, and of politics have threatened to inundate us. The An- 'a FILM ables IME HUNTER AND H13 DOG glo-Saxon conception of the home, of social conditions, of individual- Ism and of religion are serously menaced to-day. Timid politicians yield to the allen vote and other pressure, apparently having no con- victions that are not subject to re- vision by the electorate. Now the supreme international is- | Sued of our time, though not so rated | by the professional statesmen, fs | | whether these two Christian, Eng- | lish-speaking nations of the New | Norld will have the courage to heed | world will have the courage to heed | | "different" and loyal to the faith of | | the fathers and to the preaching of | |our prophets. Such is the transla- | tion of the story of the Jews into | the life of to-day. May God fulfil his { beautiful plans for us; or shall we thwart them, as did the renegade Jews? If we save our land for its historic Christian ideals, then these ideals will save our land for a world-service beyond our ken. Beginning At The Bottom While this Lesson is being stud- led all over the land, in rural cross- roads schoolhouses and in great city churches, from the Arctic Circle to the Gulf of Mexico, and far beyond into every foreign land, there will be in session in Kansas City the great International Sunday School Convention, with thousands of dele- gates In attendance. They will be considering the world from the angle of the Sunday School; and the Sun- day School from the angle of our | perplexing world conditions. All the fundamentals of good govern- ment, of world peace and of a bet- ter social order, will come under re- view. Their conclusion will be the ob- vious one that the nation's hope, tne world's hope, lies in the indoctrina- tion of the youth of to-day with the transforming teachings of the words of Jehovah. Most is being done for humanity when the boys and girls are being taught the beautiful will of God. The work of the Sunday School, it may be goberly stated, fis more important than that of inter- national conferences; because it Boes 'down to the bed rock of char- Don't limp any oy r, don't suf- fer another hour from corms. The oldest remedy and the best, the one that for fifty years has proved a true Success, will lift out your corns in a burry. Putnam's Painless Corn and Wart Extractor is the one remedy to use. Refuse a substitute. 35¢c, 25 years standard for Delayed and Jasntul ue all druggists irs package only, ra or by mail. Price $2.00. Knickerbocker Remédy Co., 7! E. Front St, To- ronte, Sale All $1.98 Pr. LADIES' WHITE BOOTS High Top - = 98¢ Pr. WORK SHIRTS ¥y Sizes and Colors Sale "95¢ Each RIFTY SHOPPERS TO OORS SOUTH OF PRINCESS STREET acter and shapes the convictions and conduct with determine the des- tiny of mankind. To make sure that our land shall avoid Judah' pitfall, and that it fulfil] the Lord's beauti- ful plans for it, we must train up our youth in the knowledge and love of God. ) (Copyright, 1922 by The Ellis Service.) ---------------- At Lavant Station. Lavant Station, June 19.--Misses Violet and Leah Prasky and Herb Prasky, students of Perth Colleg- fate, are spending their vacation with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. V Prasky. A number from here at- tended' the baseball match at Pol- and Saturday evening, played be- tween Poland and Lavant, the score being 9-9. Misses Hazel and Mionia en, a ----, ~~ Lashley and Messrs. Gordon Calford and Jack Ramsbottom, Watson's Corners, spent Sunday at J. B. Lee's. Miss Maggie Rodgers, Hood's, is spending sometime at William Browning's. Miss Jessie Moreau is visiting Miss' Vera Paul, Poland. Migs Hilda Johnston is spending an indefinite time with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. Johnston, Ompah. Mr. and Mrs. G. Sproule and Mss Elsie Lee motored to Perth on Sat- urday, S------ It takes a man two generations to get used to riches, but a woman will look as though she were born rich inside of two weeks, The first red rose to be grown ia England was planted in the garden of the Manor of Savoy, London, in the 13th century. -- -- a re Vy gid hem TN SRY 1:Lol:d By TEA A TEA YOU'LL ENJOY In 3% and 1 pound cartons BARNUM'S| FOR THE JUNE BRIDE Come in and choose your wedding cake. Almond Icing if you wish. SUGGESTIVE PRESENTS FOR JUNE BRIDES Pretty Electric Table Lamps, Boudoir Lamps, Electric Irons, Toasters, Curl- ing Tongs, Percolators, ers, Grills, Washing Machines. Vacuum H. W. NEWMAN ELECTRIC C0. Phone 441. 167 Princess Street :