Ontario Community Newspapers

Times & Guide (1909), 19 Jan 1921, p. 3

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sis, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 19, 1921 Mimico, New Toronto and lake Shore District You need business to keep going. By care- fully selecting your district and then going after that district by every available means you can place your goods before the people through the columns of V Port Creéit, Clarksen and Tammie Township lk these isapers reach the men“ and Womei1 liefdre wlmm ya: want to piace your goods? Then get in touch with as and we will shim yin how this is the medium to increase your sales and give yea publicity. hr representative iiiil call and give yea the details if yam give, w, a rhg or Egress} as a card. q A ' f I; , pm _., I I if“ - tr' " il , i , q , ih I i ' Nt a it? . , 'F, p, a B, - . lg, g , " , _ YSIJR BUSINESS THE TIMES t GUIDE Weston and Etobicoke Township THE (1)lGliRllhTi)ll THE hlmillTNill Bramptem {Mice -- Phene li) Weston i)ffie - Phone N S. WESSON Brampton and Peel County PAPE TEE EXPRESS Mount Dennis District THE NEWS r ‘3? 93 nTi7.t G Y. (kkét'lli 1 533% I,0dl'rlii) THE- © tr, ii, ' ', . b2 " ' t . E " th c, a kt w, , V A M , . I ' . f x , © , . t - it > wr ' ill , kr- On this night the usual quiet pre- vailed up to ten o‘clock. Once or twice Murphy had peered through the bar- red. glass ot the windows. As usual the night lights inside the building were burning brightly, and there was no one in sight. A few minutes after the hour of ten had struck a cold wind swept up with the inrushing fog from the bay. Mur- phy walked into the broad front doorway, buttoning his heavy coat about him. Ten years on the job had taught him the chill that could be in One of those fogs. And then he heard the shot, and the surprise of it seemed to stun him, but only for a moment. He ran down the steps of the entrance to look down Main Street, then down Franklin Ave- nue. He had not believed for a mo- ment that the sound had come from inside the bank. But there'was nobody in sight in either street, no indication of trouble. For an instant Murphy was at the nearest window, and was surveying the interior of the banks The lights were undisturbed, and he saw nobody. Yet Murphy knew that he had not been deceived about the shot. His ears were good, and he recognized the report of a gun when he heard, it. As he blew his whistle he touched the concealed button beneath the stone window ledge that started all the burglar alarms ringing. Almost immediately the lone policeman who had been patrolling the central part of the town, was on the scene. Five other officers came dashing down Main'Street in the police depart- ment’s one automobile to answer the alarm. The bank was surrounded, and if the shot had been fired inside the building, the man who had tired it was trapped there. Thieves wishing to enter that bank would have to put the watchman out of the way first, and Murphy was not to be caught off guard. After nine o'clock at night all the streets of Dayville were quiet. There was no diversion to tempt the watchman even so far as across the street. More than ten years Murphy had walked this little space of sidewalk at the corner, his cap tilted to one side, his stick swung jauntily. In those ten years there had been little to disturb the tranquility ot Day- ville's main business corner. Once there had been shooting a block or so away, but Murphy had not been lured from his corner. Murphy,' who was paid by the bank, walked first on the titty-toot front- age on Franklin Avenue, and then around to the eighty feet on Main Street. At times he stood on the well- lighted corner where his vigilant eye could command both sides of the bank. Here at the corner was the main entrance of the building. All the side windows and the entrance on Franklin Avenue were heavily bar- red. "Sure that you heard a. shot?" one of the policeman asked Murphy. " am that! I haven’t lost my hearing"," Murphy snapped in reply. "Anybody been hanging around the bank to-night?" "Not with me on the job at the corner," Murphy said. "Y0u've boasted a. million times, Murphy, that nobody could get into the bank at night without you seeing them." “ No one had left the building; the two policemen outside were sure of that. Murphy still declared that he had heard a shot, 7 "Sounds fishy,." Captain, Hoyt de, clared. “If there's anybody in the bank building he must be in one of the vaults. He couldn’t hide any- where else. Who is the nearest ot'- ficial who. can" open the vaults ?" T V “Mr. Emery, the cashier," Murphy said. "He lives on Maple Street about six blocks out. He can open the vaults where they keep books and pa- pers and/such, and the one where some of the money is kept to be us- ed first thing in the'mornin’. But even Mr. Emery can't open the ’big vault where the real stuff is piled in rows. There's a time locks on that one." The police car sped away for the cashier, and the officers guarded the entrance of the building where the front door still remained unlocked. A small crowd had gathered, but the officers forced them away from, the corner. Twenty minutes later the cashier was on the scene. Emery smiled when the situation was explained to him in detail by Captain Hoyt. “A man is a fool to boast," Mur- phy said. "Suppose we go inside and look things over." "Can you. get inside y' “I ean," said Murphy." "I have the keys to the big front doors to be used in‘case ot emergency such as is this." TWO officers were assigned to re- main outside and guard all possible avenues of escape while the other three with the night watchman enter- ed the building. Whoever had fired the shot must be hiding beneath one of the long marble counters on which were placed the windows of the cash- ier and the tellers. Through the/lobby they went and around to the"little gateway that led to the interior. There was no one in sight. Carefully they searched every possible hiding place. There were few corners into which a man might creep. It took the officers less than five minutes to make sure that there was nobody there. They went back to the entrance again. For the three thousand six hundred and fortieth time Night Watchman Murphy patrolled the corner in front ot the First National Bank of Day- ville. On the other three thousand six hundred and thirty-nine times nothing had happened. This time Night Watchman Murphy heard a shot. Murphy cautiously unlocked the heavy front doors. Police Captain Hoyt, with whom Murphy had been talking, gently thrust the watchman aside and led the way. Murphy and the two policemen, their weapons held ready for instant use, followed at the captain's heels. AVerr1 get Emery left the building; the outside were sure of still declared that he the captain TIMES & GUIDE, WESTON The officers sprang aside instino tively and thrust their guns toward the vault. The form on the floor did not stir. Cautiously, wondering what it might mean, fearing a trick ot some sort, Captain Hoyt bent and touched the man on _ the shoulder. There was no response. "Couldn't have been suicide," Hoyt declared. "He's a robber, and I'll bet we findWe has a record. But how did he come inside this vault? Did some other man kill him and then look him in here? But what became of the other man. He never left the Bane-Murphy would have seen him. And he isn't inside now." The cashier had been making a. further investigation. "Fifty thousand dollars for the pay roll of the Dayville Ink Company is gone," he said. "I placed it in the vault myself the last thing yesterday afternoon. The company always gets its pay roll money as soon as the bank opens." "Dead'." Hoyt said. "Shot through the head. Look at the red pool on the floor-that tells the story." _ _ "And take a look at this!" Night Watchman Murphy added. Near the body was a small Mack bag containing a kit of burglar tools: The dead min wore rubber grditiis, In his hip pocket was an undisrchii)ug(-i, ed revolver, and the only wiraivii" the man had. t ' "1: Emefy opirned the door. An incan- descent light inside the vault flashed into life. Those at the door saw a man stretched on the floor of the vault. The cashier smiled again as he be- gan working the combination. Captain Hoyt, Murphy,, and another officer stood behind him, their weapons held ready. It did appear ridiculous to them now. It there was somebody in that vault' who bad looked him in? All the employees of the bank had checked out the evening before as usual. Detective Billy Shannon of the San Francisco Police Department, was on the ground in Dayville at 8" o'clock in the morning. There was a special reason Why Detective Shannon had been sent down by the chief of the bureau in the city. The baffling case in Dayville gave promise of solving some of the recent cases about San Francisco, provided this latest crime could be explained. “I heard that shot, sir," Murphy declared. "And I'm bettin' that it was inside the bank." "How could a man crawl in here, lock himself in from the outside, and then fire a shot that could be heard away out in the street?" Emery wanted to know, smiling at Murphy again. These conjectures Shannon proceed- ed to eliminate in order. If the man had shot himself, he would have been unable to close the vault afterward. and the sharpness of the report that Murphy had heard meant that the If nobody had left the bt1ilping there were but three possible answers to the puzzle: The dead man might have committed suicide.or shot hint- self by accident, the murderer might have léft by the way tot" the eeil- ing to the roof, or he might still be in the bank building. Shannon himself had suggested that he he sent to Dayviile. For some time he had been conducting a cam- paign against a band ot clever crim- inals known as the Crrayson gang, and he believed that-the gang might have had a hand in this. Cashier Emery opened the first vault, and they found it empty ex- cept for piles of dusty ledgers and records. Another was opened, but nobody was found inside. The cash- iep went to the one remaining vault that could be opened at that hour. ' The arrived ot the police, the search of the interior, the calling of the cash- ier, the opening of the vault and the finding of the body and the kit of burglar toois---al1 we're recounted with extreme detail. Detective Shan- non aSked many questions, but could make no headway in establishing what he Had hoped to es,tabijslr--tr,ar somebody had escaped from the building after the shot had been fired. Murphy-had watched the two sides of the building, and the other tyvo sides were' fire walls innocent Of door or window. Dayville’s chief ot police was only too glad to turn everything over to competent Billy Shannon. And Shan- non had not been in Dayville tor more than halfan hour before he ar- rived at the conclusion that this bank robbery and murder eclipsed anything that yet had occurred about the bay. Going over the ground carefully with Captain Hoyt and Night Watch- man Murphy, Shannon was unable to adduce any facts which did not add to the puzzling features of the case. Murphy declared that nobody had entered: the bank. He explained how he had heard the shot, had g,"rven.tire alarm, and how he had wutcJied'both sides of the building carefully until the police reached the scene. "Murphy, you have been hearing things," he said. “How could anybody be inside the bank? . How would they get in without you seeing them? And you have already searched the build, ing and found no one. If you heard a shot it must have been in some other buidling around the corner. Since I am here it wouldn't do any harm to investigate the vaults." T Shannon decided that if the Gray- son gang was responsible for the Dayville crime they had outdone themselves. The Graysons were three brothers who had been operating ai- most in open defiance of the police. Theywvere noted for courage and skill. But even the Graysons did not make a practice of taking fifty thou- sand dollars out ot a vault without opening.it, to say nothing of killing a man, locking his body in the vault, and then escaping from the building without-going out of it. II ing. “I would like the name of the con- trpetors who built this bank," Shan- Pip! 'teuuested. :Lj'Siieli & Frame,” the banker in- t,spiyned him “We have been using this new building only a little more than ‘a year, you know." . “Thank you, sir,” Shannon said. N He hurried to a telephone and talk- ed with the office of the contracting firm. In half an hour a little man in working tags entered and asked for Shannon. One of the few positive facts ot the case was the escape of the rob- ber and murderer. Of this fact there could be no doubt, for the fifty thousand dollars was gone, and the man found in the vault was dead. Dil- ly Shannon began to feel that he had run up against a wall of solid stone. The detective walked to the lobby and strolled back and forth, his keen eyes alert for anything, anywhere, that might be slightly unusual. Then he returned to the vault where the red pool had been cleaned away. He examined the ceiling, the walls, and the floor. Finally his eyes rested on a spot in one corner of the vault. He hurried to President Butler, whose ot- fice was at the other end of the build- '“I guess that rm the man you want, str," he said. "rm the man who bossed the tile job in this build- ing "You’re the man," Shannon said, leading him into the vault. "Now tell me something. . Why did you make that centre group of tile figures open at the left, when all the other groups in the floor open to the "My men never laid those tile that way!" the foreman declared. "Think that Ld stand tor a job like that? That's been tampered with, some It was not until the finger-print work had been concluded that Sham non gave the word to the bank offi- cials to have the vault cleaned up and the red stains removed. Sydney Butler, president ot the bank, arriv- ed as this work was in progress. In the confusion he had not been in- formed of the robbery and murder. The head ot the institution betray- ed much astonishment at the news of what had happened. right?" way." "Tear it up'." Detective Shannon on dered. There WaS'a new ring in his voice and a new light in his eyes. The foreman obtained a chisel, in- serted it between two of the tile pat- terns, and lifted one. ot the plates off its concrete base. He' put the end ot the chisen under the next square, and the chisel struck wood instead of cement. The vault itself yielded no prints of value, although all possible traces were developed and photographed. These turned out to be marks left by regular employees of the bank, and by some of the officers at the time the vault was opened the night before. Obviously the robbers had taken precautions with gloves to leave no prints. dared There was but one tangible clew upon which Detective Shannon could work-the slain man. ,Prints were taken of the dead man's fingers, but they were not duplicated by anything on record in the San Francisco bur- eau, as Shannon soon learned by iete- graphing the formula. Shannon's next step was to wire to Leaven- worth, the national finger-print, clear- ing house. If there were no dupli- cates in Leavenworth, the slain man was not a criminal ot record any- where i'n the country. t Replacing the piano box Shannon closed the wooden door and left it exactly as he had found it. Next he crawled back through the damp-tun- The man bent to his work: A trap door, topped with patterns of tile, was lifted out of the floor ot the vault.' It was rather dark there, but not so dark as it had been in the tunnel. A door opening into a store room ot some kind in front was securely lock- ed and evidently bolted. Forcing up a, boarded window in the rear of the room Shannon fixed the location of the door from the areaway adjoining the bank building. Then he starteu back. . _ In this dark, underground tunnel, Detective Shannon worked hisway cautiously. deciding against a light, and taking the Chance of encounter- ing one or more criminals in hiding. For thirty feet he wormed his Way through the damp earth, Another few feet and the passageway ended suddenly against a boarded wall. His ear close to what resembled a. wooden door, Detective Shannon waited for a sound. For fully ten minutes he listened, but not the faintest sound did he hear. Feeling along the edge of the boards Shau- non’s fingers rested on a small hinge. He hunted for a latch on the other side, but‘there was none. Then he pushed carefully against the war- tition. It did not yield. lynce more he shoved at it, and when he let go the door sprang' back toward him on a Irebound. The. door nas unlotcyced and opened on the tunnel side. Against the wooden partition stood a. large piano box. A faint ray of light trickled in at the edge. Pushing against this obstacle Detective Shan- non found that it yielded. He Gqueez- ed himself silently out along the side of the box and found himself in a small warehouse. "That ‘was a mighty good piece of work laying the pattern on a wood- en base," the mason declared.. "The thing they didn't figure on was that there are two tile patterns that look exactly alike and are really exactly different. I'll say you have a good eye, Detective Shannon." But Shannon did not care to waste time discussing the precess of, tile laying. He stepped into the opening, convinced that the trap-door job was a marvel in many ways, the tile tit- ting so snugly that scarcely anybody would have noticed it. Shannon found that for a distance of five feet the hole beneath the trapdoor went straight down and was about three feet in diameter. _Then it branched off into a narrow passage- way large enough for a man to crawl through. The detective examined the ceil- ing and found it was solid, glazed plaster. Again the interior ot the bank was searched, and even the walls back ot the radiators were ex- amined. No man could be hiding in the building. door of the vault had been open when the shot was fired. Further- more the revolver of the dead man did not show that it had been dis- charged. - ‘Off with it, man!” Shannon or Ill, He wanted his reply from Leaven- worth, and found it Waiting tor him. The finger prints of the slain man found in the vault were on record. They were those of a. certain Simon Lurch,' a notorious criminal of Boston, who had served two terms for burg- lary, and who had finally escaped from prison. The Leavenworth auth- orities gave the furthur information that Lurch had escaped with another man, a youth named John Hayes, a first-time offender. A description of Hayes had been gtnt . " "John Hayes," he reflected. "I think I know him as Jimmy Her, man." He telephoned San Francisco to ask that the drag'net be thrown out for his man. But the dragnet was unneces- sary. To Shannon came one ot those accidents that happen at times, and often are puzzling. At the depot, ready to return to San Francisco and take up the chase of the Grayson gang, the officer met John Hayes face to face. Further Questions brought forth the fact that more bags of coffee were hauled away from the store than had been seen going into it. Detective Shannon knew then how the earth from the tunnel had been removed, “It has all the marks of a fancy Grayson job," he told Captain Hoyt, as he walked with the latter' down the street toward the telegraph office. Shannomread this description care- fully. _ "f want you/Shannon said. "The bank job, you know." "What bank job?" Hayes asked. "And for murder," Shannon added, watching his man carefully. If you are run down, no pep, it you lack nerve force, if you want to feel as you should teel, you try Vital Tablets. _ Price 50e per box, 6 for $2.50, at all drug stores. The Scobell Drug Company, Montreal, Que. From tenants ot other storerooms in the building. Shannon learned that the tea-and-coffee house had been opened about three weeks before. No- thing unusual had been noticed about the place until it had been closed so mysteriously two days before. It had not been opened since. He expected some move from Hayes as he stioke, but none came. The youth looked at him sullenly, and then hung his head. "Old stuff!” he said. "I might as well admit yOu’ve got me, but not for murder. I’ve been double-crossed, that's all. I'm sore. Take me along. I'm ready to squeal. But you’ll never hang a murder on me." " For Weak Women "We'll go‘up to police headquarters, where you can talk as long; as you please," Shannon said. "And the straighter you talk the better it wif; be for you.” _ The detective, leaving two men on guard, hurried to the office of the agent/s tor the building, where he got descriptions of the two men who had rented the storeroom. These des- criptions tallied perfectly with two of the three men for whom the San Francisco police had been looking tor months. They were the Grayson brothers. "Gone!" Shannon said a few min- utes later. "This store was only a blind. And since they got away with fifty thousand dollars and killed one of their ‘pals we may have a long chase." "; . Trying the door. Detective Shannon found that it was locked. The tea- and-coffee house evidently was not open for business. The tour officers forced the door and entered, prepared for an attack. London's oldest markets are said to be Smithfield, where cattle were sold in 1150, and Billingsbate, which is reputed to have been founded in 400 BC. This building, which faced on Frankline Avenue, was a long, three- story brick structure, ' with several stores on the ground floor, But the particular storeroom that Shannon wanted to see was a small, narrow room on the first .floor, immediately adjacent to the bank. It was DCC11- pied by a coffee-and-tea establish- ment, but, although it was still early in the afternoon, there was no sign of life about the place. These are the lessons which Hydro Electric Commission engineers em- phasize as to he learned from'thge (Math by electrocution of Mrs. Aria Batten, of I’Vhridge "Ave,. who," while in a bath. otteazop"red to remove the electric beaver. It has been shown that one of the tarminals carrying cur-Mm to' the two coils was in contact with the framework " of: the heme); which was clectrified as a result; this Was caused by' a breakdown in thé mica insulation. C -. to ordirvarV Par? These are thi E19c1'ric Comm phasize as to 1 death by elect Miss Edna Bowel, 15, of Berkeley, is the youngest student in the Univexu sity _of California. During the first six months of 1920 more than 8,000 divorces were grant- ed in Paris. Never touch any electgic fixture while in bath' or standing on anything wet. nel and out into the bank vault,whe1'e President Butler, Cashier Emery and the tileman were waiting. Giving orders that the vault should be closed until further notice, Shannon took Captain Hoyt and two of his men to the building adjoining the bank, to which the tunnel had led. New York has abank which lends radium to hospitals. Mrs. Elizabeth Holloway is the champion chess player in England. . Always keep olec‘triéal equipmer in first class YePair1 - Each seaplane attached to the United States naval air' forces while in flight is ordered lo carry pigeons for the delivery of messages when the craft becomes disabled. President 1Voodrow Wilson was recently created a; field marshal of the Brazilian army, sharing the -dis- tinction with King Albert of Bélg‘ium Kins; George of Great Britain, and Marshal Foch of France. --- Twelve states have thus cash bonuses to their ret iers. ,p_ (ne hundred and three thousand vetrans in the Grand Army ot the Tle- public now answer to roll call. To settle the remainder of the war debt of the United States, under the president plan, it will take about 25 years. _ BE‘\V:1RE OF ELECTROCUTION (To be continued next week.) J U ST FACTS a mp SCC) the 1esso INF, atfar-h 116a srcket fixtures. tar voted mned sol- I How little did the disciples enter into the thought and purp'OSG of their Master. He had set His face to go to Jerusalem and there endure all the horror of His atoning death that others might obtain lite ternal. He had Just been telling them for the third time since His transfig'uration of His coming death. He had gone into the details of it with minute par- ticularity (vs. 17-10). But they had not heeded what He had been saying, so occupied were they with their own petty ambitions. At this most inop- portune moment two of the best men in the apostolic company come to Him with a request that they be pre- ferred above all the others. Matthew tells us that it was Salome, their mo- ther, who made the request. Salome may have proferred the request, but it was they who set her up to it, and so Mark is altogether accurate in saying that it was they who spoke (Mk. 10: 35). It is quite a common practice tor designing men to get some sympathetic woman ask for them what they hardly like to ask for themselves (2 Sam. 14: 1-19; 1 Ki. 2: 16, 20). Jesustook it that the request came from them; tor He ad- dressed His answer to them (v. 22). It is quite likely that in their eager- ness’When Salome began to speak they broke in with the same request. They presumed upon the fact that Jesus had already bestowed upon them favors withheld from most of the apostolic company (Mk. 5: 37; 9: 2; 14: 33). They may have also hop- ed" something from the relationship existing between His family and their own. Their first preliminary request Was a very large one (Mk. 10: 35). Jesus promises to do Just that won- derful thing for every one who abides in Him (Jno. 15: 7). Jesus asks them in return,"'What would ye that I should do for you?" He is asking the same of everyone of us to-day. Little did they realize how exalted was the position they were asking. They simply wanted higher office than anyone else. The desire to have the highest position has brought more, discord into the church of Christ and wrought more mischief than any oth- er thing. How often JeSus has to say to us when we pray. "Ye know not what ye ask” (Rom. 8: 26). Like James and John, we fail of getting what we ask because of the selfish motive in our prayers (Jas. 4: 3).. There was a condition of sharing Christ's glory with Him of which His petitioners little dreamed, viz., that they share with Him His cup and baptism of shame and suffering (cf. ch. 14: 36: Matt. 26: 39; Lu. 22: 42; Jno. 18: II; Lu. 12: 50). No one can share with Christ in His glory unless they first share with Him in His suffering and repection (2 Tim 2: 12; Rom. 8: 17). James and John were full of self-confidence. Unhesi- tatingly they declare themselves able to drink the cup that Christ drank, and to be baptized with the'baptism with which He was baptized. Like many of us they did not stop to meas- ure the meaning of the words which they so glibly uttered. Many to-day with equal readiness and equal thoughtlessness, declare themselves ready to follow wherever Christ leads the Way. Thoughtless as their word lwas, nevertheless Jesus took them at their word. We best be careful about our professions; for Jesus may take attained to the name that is above every name (Phil., 2: 629). He that would attain to real greatness must tread the bath. . but to minister. His ministry cost Him all He had. He laid down/His life as a ransom to purchase lite for a wicked world that had forflelted it. He paid the price that would pur- chase life for others though it_t00k all He had (2 Cor. 5: 21; Gal. 3: 13; Ti. 2r14; Isa. 53: 5: 2 Cor. f: 9). _Hty gave up the highest glory and des, cended to the deepest shame, and thus Lu. 22: 24-30). . ---e __.. w "s'r Time-A, D. 30. Place-Near Jericho. Exposititm--I. The Self-Seeking Dis- ciples, 17-24. 11;.18: 14; (No. 19-23: 1 Pet, r' the kingdom/is 1 thm of this prime He came nbt to but to minister. Him all He had, life as a ransom us-at our word. They both drank of the same cup of shame and suffer- ing that Jesus did. _James was the first of the apostolic company to suf- fer martyrdom (Ac. 12: 3), and John was the last to suffer for the word of God and the testimony of Jesus (Rev. 1: 9). All who have part with Him in His Kingdom must experience a similar baptism ot suffering (Jno. 15: 20; 17: 14). Jesus did not prom- ise them that they should have their desire. It lay with the Father to de.. cide that~(Matt. 20: 23). The ten who had made no such request as the two were nevertheless just as selfish as they. They showed it by their in- dignation when they heard of the re- quest, There was cause for censure; but it was selfishness that prompted theiritrdignation, they wanted those places themselves. Already they had had a controversy as to who should be the greatest (Mk. 9: 334%), and the same controversy would come up again and that too at that solemn oc- casion when the Lord would announce once more His impending death and institute the Lord's supper (Lu. 22: 24). They needed sorely to learn in honor to prefer one another (Rom. 12: 10; Phil. 2: 3). So do we. II. The Self-renounce Master, 25: Jesus dealt very gently with their selfishness. "He called them to Him.” He always draws us nearer to flimf self when He would win us from our low lives to a higher one. The meth- od of Christ's kingdom is utterly at variance with the method of the king, clams of this earth. In the kingdoms of this .world he that rules is great; in the kingdom of Christ. he that serves is great. If any one wills to be great in Christ's kingdom, he must take'the place of a servant of bthers, and he that would be the very first must take the place of o. salve of all, This thought occurs again and again in a variety of expressions through- out the N. T. (Mk. o: 35; Matt. 20: 26; 27; 23: 8-12; Lu. O: 46-48; 14::' Lesson Text-Matt Matt. 19: .27-20t If,'. Lesson TV. January 23, 1921 PROMOTION IS THE KINGDOM Golden Text-e-The Son of man came not to be ministered unto, but to min- ister, and to give his lite a ransom for many. Matt. 20: 28. _ 28 This Week's S.S. Lesson --Matt. 20:17-28. (Read 20: 16; Mk. 10: 32-45; Bath. He had gone it with minute par- -19). But they had He had been saying, they with their own PAGE THREE h governs it. sterei unto, 1inistry cost d down/His mac lite for face to go endure all death that Cor. 9 ." Head of ilIustrac. i K I

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