Ontario Community Newspapers

Newmarket Era , September 9, 1927, p. 7

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food for I rounder on should eat lady Oh to- orders here and havt no fear youll get coal with- out delay We may hot high as poet but were might efficient as coal men Cal LITTLE A Freak of NI Kins above Council met at Tem- Half on Saturday August Members ail in committee of the Bills and Accounts Mr Duggau in the Chair when the fol lowing accounts were presented and ordered paid Farmers llvti Co cement Win Han- Ion yds gravel Davis cement Cecil Wood conveying re H Murray supplies re roads Hydro Electric Power Com lamps Telephone Co PVS J Fox supplies Met- Hoofing Co culvert FURNACES STOVES PLUMBING Eavetroughing Etc ORDERS Prices Moderate EDGAR Roadhouie Furniture Shop Comer of Main and Queen St NEWMARKET They hare chosen Church Point will A The of the Unit Will resume Fall Term n day evening id Church Mlsi Thursday of last on when Isabella se and Mrs Reoe Margaret A wonderful tiling happened in time for it to we to In a little cottage alt alone by herself lived dear old Aunt Elizabeth just the quietest kindliest Highland Scotch lady one could Smith Maintenance Blackburn and roads Geo W Aiming trucking Riley grading etc to Eves cement for bridges John A Lynn construction W Eves cement to E John A Lynn Ivan main Geo Ellison reps culvert Lewis Mount weeds and brush James Murray E Courtney culvert 4035 Courtney gravel J Archibald main liner Harrison main Wm rawford avis teaming 60 Mark Allen culvert 4775 Davis team Mark Allen new culvert A reps to Win tile etc 980 James Newton yds realized beforehand what a difference ijeel in many a long days journey To her it was going to make What happened was there came one day the young minister for a the removal of the fence between our yard and after a good visit he took the Book the next neighbors was an old fence andand they knelt in prayer together The very rickety one The pqsts were leaning in felt that the prayer and the blessing every direction and the palings were come the other way from this ripe and in a number of places The coalwagon that saintly soul but in a Scotch parish the min- in the yard in the wintertime had a is the minister and so he But spite at the fence and always managed to as he would have risen at the close of his break a few more palings on each visit Per- prayer he was startled to hear Aunt Elizabeth haps I shouldnt blame the wagon for to pray for this was unusual among a space was pettily narrow and the horses feetjHighland people Her prayer ben they were turning the Scotch folk say inflate and Coal we got the less communing with forgetting decided that minister and his work At the close she turned into the Lords prayer and followed would slip on the at any rate the fence we had So at last it it had better come down Now the surprising thing as the fence was away though it had only a low fence and one you could through- both yards seemed to be far beyond the sum of their combined meas little space we had possessed spread marvellously out into an expani gave us the feeling of owning many from the neighbors yard tli el 11 9480 King George Si Stuart Scott School Staunton Sr Primer of Mrs Wilson I he had made her daughter Mi d Mrs Belfry Wedding March w Frances Campbell The Miss Ann was agisted y Belfry and good wishes beautiful and useful gifts i In lir Basket and Wax Bouquet of On Monday after he the garden an 1 slipped filing to the him fall and went to red Deceased was born in limbury his Eves Township His son the lie obtained at Itki Works by depositing f Public Works which will If tin Intending bidder bid ink payable to order of tin of equal t ft ttic amount of the tender Of Dominion of Canada I of the Canadian National Rail Company win also be curtly or bonds and a cheque If red to make up an amount ago little Aubrey ilsi reps to usual till she came to the great long ing of the soul for the forgiveness of the Lord and then she changed it into Forgive us our trespasses as ought to forgive those that trespass against us It is long ago now and Aunt Elizabeth has gone home but the minister has not forgotten But that day he almost stayed on his knees that clear out through our yard to the street One evening when the moon was shining beautifully I spent half an hour strolling back and forth on the walk just back of our house it was the same old walk I had been treading for years not continuously but a path along the edge of a park yard lay fair in the moonlight grass and trees and an arbor all common enough before nut now enchanted into wide vistas of thinking about it long after the gentle had said Amen It was just what so many of us had longed to say only we had never dared to pat it into words We want more than we are willing to give We are not sure that our forgiveness of others has been just as full and free as we need for our selves and we would like it well we could pray Aunt Elizabeths prayer Dear old soul No one knew she had any Blacksalary 90 That the be authorized to ask the York County Council icood Roads Commission to make a White Line bowing the- proper turn at King City East from the Fourth Armstrong That Charles Lewis be paid the sum of for one sheep killed by dogs per valuators certificate MacMurchy Armstrong That a grant of be paid to Agricultural Society payable to Dr That Mur ray be paid for goods sup plied to A MeGilt Egan That the treas urer be authorized to pay the fol lowing accounts for advertising re King Creek Bridge as soon as hills OK Frank Barber Engin eerMcLean Publishing Co Daily Journal of Commerce Canadian Engineer and con tract Record That Clerk be authorized to communi cate with the Township Solicitor the mode of procedure re Hydro Pole opposite Wells stable Lot Con King Armstrong That may it be resolved that the Clerk instruct the Solicitor to prepare a Bylaw appointing Cecil- Walker and G the the lario Liquor Control Act- On motion Council adjourned to meet at Temperance Hall with mysterious shadows that hinted at far trespasses to be forgiven or that she had any deipths of shrubbery beyond The word whom she found it hard to forgive What a came into my mind dont you great promise the Master has put into cur love the musical old words of our fore- mouths Away then with all our own little fathers and I felt like a queen walking inbillernesses our treasured grudges our grounds of her palacel Iter thoughts and memories and feelings let imagination Perhaps but it is a truth there be a house cleaning of our souls so that of much larger meaning than usually grasp these things being all cast out the fullness that every fence or barrier between people I of the sunshine of the pardoning love of God robs them of far more than the little strip of may be shed abroad in our hearts So let us ground it stands on Somehow every forgive first and then come with glad and make between ourselves and any of hearts to our Fattier in Heaven and ghbors in the world narrows our out- boldly claim the prayer promise Forgive look and makes us poorer Whether it is a us our trespasses as we forgive them that tres- of race or creed ojj color or opinions pass against us For if ye forgive men it keeps us from feeling neighborly it robs their trespasses your heavenly Father will also is of what belongs to us our satisfaction and forgive you enjoyment of everything in life the sharing of what we have with others and of what they CONSCIENCE AND JAM of u political meeting Secretary the home of his daughter where he died on Wednesday afternoon and was largely attended Rev I Mead- the Christian Church service assisted lij oclock In a Toronti lier of young boys with jumping one he went off of his fathers lot On his way he fell dressed- Through- with Ida hind in a sling plaj his Ja el stiff and he was taken it the latter thought it I told and so was taken after Brought of Public or nitro kindness J more creed- Utile more living an a little less mi- an a llllo knocking friend when J Mine little lew I J on 1 a Utile less wofttisirluh they passed by heard the little unusual manner am tor was immediately ic boy was taken to Hospital Toronto of GREAT CONVENIENCE business lives Mr rous heart and when he trudging his I offer the man a lift morning- after THEIR NATURE AND USE of its phosphor I so widely used or so oluhlc form of phosphoric slug hns found to be profitable phosphor- in many parts of the Do- t has proved of fairly well supplied with have This is because every fence means a want sir William Hartley was a prominent British of trust Whether we have made it to keep Methodist He was also a prominent jam our neighbor or his dog or his Dr A S Peake tells the fol- lns ideas it means we fear he will get too lowing story of him A friend of mine he near us and we shall lose something by his grocers shop and heard a less So we build our foolish fences customer express himself about the lot only him out but shut ourselves Nonconformist conscience What is this Poor silly prisoners who build our own Nonconformist conscience I should like to be asked The grocer promptly Try taking away the fences between your- peached down a pot of Hartleys jam and and your neighbor It may take a little it with some emphasis on the counter said while to show him that you dont plant garden Nonconformist conscience and for his chickens nor agree with all of his where Hartleys jam was known as one of the ideas but in time you will bo belter neighbors answer a sufficient one of the bigness of lifo that Conscience and good workmanship seem that naturally to be liked together We expect a good man to make and sell good shoes good good food and if there is had before This doesnt you need to go and camp down on his side of the line or adopt all his opinions or any thing that is really worth while But it does mean that you will enlarge life and his and give to all the world a living picture how good and how pleasant it is for brethren to dwell together in unity They know not God that think to please by making themselves miserable Bishop Hall I take it to be a principal rule of life be too mucli addicted to any one thing th hat the man makes or sells we conclude at once that is something With his conscience also Shoddy doesAt to go with solvation Righteous and building do not make a good team seems strike its roots inlo the depths of the soul and we expect it branches to reach out to our farthest human activity We must do something besides pray It is useless asking God for a bountiful harvest if rest IT AT IE being due character of this fertiliser from free time In England and conducted experiments ha that basic slag gives good results wb applied to glass lands bringing in I full will r anil In this of old pastures Tn Eat Maynt give you a lift madam Canada chiefly In the rnvlnccs and on the Pacific cor conducted on the Experimental Farms that basic Is valuable for Imotby hay els and with a long for the LEARNING THE LAW is a difference in dollars There is the tramp dollar the dollar that is spent away from home Then there is the home Dollar with its home circulation home benefits home profits Though both of are marked One Hundred Cents the home dollar continues to multiply itself at home for here community interests are mutual The success of this town con tributes Jo the success of everybody In it A prosperous town rests on individual prosperity Not so with the Tramp dollar Once spent it is gone Well Bill Idi Era to Absent The advantage to you of spending your dollar at home is greater than the tramp dollar can possibly buy if it bought you one hundred cents worth which it cannot possibly do because the other fellow must make a profit There is a big truth in this worth your serious thought TORONTO

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