1924, foreverty . wash-day method Rreo is ideal for any wash-day method you use. You do not have to change any of your usual steps--just use Rinso where you used to use ordinary soap. If you like to boil your white cot- tons, Rinso will give you just the safe .cleansing suds you need in the boiler. it you use a washing machine, follow the advice of the big ing machine manufacturers-- use Rinso. Just soaking with this new kind of soap loosens all the dirt until a single rinsing leaves the clothes clean and spotless. However you do your wash, make it easy by using Rinso. Rinse is sold by all grocers and department stores If vou use a Washing Machine, soak your clothes in the Rinse suds asusual. Inthe morning add more Rinso solution and work the machine. Thenrinse and dr vou will have a on sweel' snow - while wash, LEVER BROTHERS LIMITED TORONTO R-4-27 [appearance stirs thoughts of that oth- YOU BUY WHEN! The saceptional tone quality in the Weber Piano appeals to the most ascethetic taste. HEAR FOR YOURSELF AND BE CONVINCED. AT C. W. LINDSAY'S Warerodms, Princess Street hron Beds . .$4.50 Ll]) 2" post Beds, wood HF finish worth $15.50 for $10.50 2" post Steel Bods, wood finishes, worth $20 : for ... " .$16.50 Springs . . . $5, $6, $8.50 and $11. Pillows $1.50 pair Iron Cribs $8.50 to fHE DAILY BRITISH | AREAL BOY IN OLD JERUSALEM ' | The International Sunday Sch ool Lesson for July 13th Is: | "The Boyhood of Jesus."-- Matt. 2:1-23; Luke 2.40-52. | By WILLIAM T. ELLIS. { No guide book can tell a trdveler; which the farmer should not look { what wi! Le his most memorable ex-! back. Work and play, and home study | perience. I have forgotien nearly all|in the Book that has made more men lof the starred "sights" of Nazareth: wise than all the universities of the | but my two most vivid experiences in| world, were the boyhood preparations { the town of Jesus' boyhood were pre-| of our Lord for his ministry as the | scribed in no volumes, probably no sympathetic friend of all who labor other traveler ever duplicated them.|and are heavy laden. Even my unique privilege, just one "This is the Gospel of Labor; year ago, of addressing a hundred eag- | Ring it, ye bells of the kirk! er-eyed boys in old Nazareth, takes] The Lord of Love came down from rank below these other two memories, above First of these was a midday sojourn| To dwell with the men who work." in one of the large limestone caves, which abound in the steep hills that fence in Nazareth. I had been clam- bering about the country side, when I| boyhood can we reconstruct the early came upon this cavern, which opcned | life of Jesus. The Bible relates but one out like an eye upon the little town. | anecdote, the experiefite in the Temple From within the cave I photographed |at twelve, We have the record that he Nazareth in its entirety. It was a rare was subject unto his parents in Naz- place to sit in the shade and brood|areth, and that he himself became a over the scene below; and beyond ques | carpenter, following his father's trade. tion the cave was as well known to the | Is it not strange that the calling of the boy/Jesus as to the olive-skinned, black | carpenter is not the most popular in eyed Nazarene lads of today, whose | Christendom today? In it, one pecul- iarly follows +in-the--footsteps of the Master. Neither high school nor college training had the boy Jesus;\his univer. Mary used to roam these hills, adven-| sity was his mother's knee," the coun- turing, exploring, and dreaming the! sels of Joseph, and the teachings of 'long, long thoughts" of youth. Here|the rabbis in the Sunday synagogue He learned to love the flowers and the| sessions--plus the brooding activity of birds that later enriched His discour-|an alert-minded, out-of-doors boy. ses. For man's tools are of boyhood's| What he lacked in learning he made up forging: nobody ever escapes the shap-| in wisdom; and our overtaught day ing hand of his youth. needs to hear the Old Testament ad- monition. "With all your getting, get wisdom." ¥ : A Boy Who Went To Church. Only from the natural setting of his er Boy, in memory of whom Nazareth has become a holy place. Just like other boys,-the Son of -- Our Day's Boy Problem. No young godling, with the super-| All that any country boy's first trip human sticking out all over Him, was | to the big city means to him, the visit Jesus. The apocryphal stories of His| to Jerusalem when he was twelve childhood miracles cause normal! meant to Jesus--and far more. For minds to turn away in revolt from|now he had reached the age of a res- these legends. Jesus was a real boy,! ponsible "son of the law." He was and He lived a real life in a real home! going up to the holy city of countless in a real town. He entered upon His memories, to share with the men in the mission through the natural prepara-! feast of the passover. »Most™ of the tion of the ordinary experiences of|sacred stories with which his young life. To that end He had come into! mind had been filled centered in Jeru- the world, in order that He might | salem, the sacred shrine to which the crowd close to every phase and feeling | companies of neighbors went up exul- of human life. Boys understand Jesus, | tingly with psalms of acclaim upon because Jesus understands boys. I| their lips. We do not have pilgrimages seemed to see Him in the happy, hand-| in this western world, so we have no some youngsters swimming in the, analogy in out personal experience for Lake of Galilee; and in the boys play-| this festal occasion: which was at ing in Nazareth's streets. He no more | once religious, patriotic and social. wore a halo than do they. Strongly marked, and lying on the By way of the Nazareth Boy, we are | very surface of this Lesson, is the obv- brought face to face with our own boy | ious teaching concerning the place of problem. For of course the case of the religion and church-going in the life boys is fundamental to all manhood! of the average young person. Church- issues. The Rotary Clubs sense this| attendance by children is diminishing in their new program. of boy service. | nowadays; and it is more than a coin- So do the 'leaders of the gquickened! cidence that reverence, obedience and Boy Scout Movement. So do educa-! noble idéalism are being supplanted by tors and discerning Sunday School | conceited forwardness arrogance and { workers. The wisest know that if | small and low materialism. If the na- | the average boy's inclination toward | tion is ever to follow Christ, our child- { heroism and idealism is to be witness- | ren must first of all follow him to the ed, it must have the support of relig-| Father's house. Church-going is an in- and of the boys' Boy who became all| dispensable factor in the training of men's Man. Give our boys the real | youth. Christ, and they will become all that! we fail to be. , 3 ENE Was Jesus A Prig. In A Nazareth Carpenter Shop. Often the boy; Jesus in the Temple, Next to the hillside cave, with its| who, engrossed, had tarried" behind happy musings. I remember best] when the Nazareth caravan left Jeru- about Nazareth the old-fashioned car. | salem--is pictured as teaching the penter shop I once found--not the ec-| preachers, laying down the law to the clesiastically overlaid "Joseph's shop" | rabbis, and in general proving himself of tradition; but a real workshop of the | wiser than his elders. There is nothing ancient Syrian village type, where the in the Bible or in the character of carpenter sat on the floor, and, using) Jesus, to support this view, Jesus was both hands and feet, made yokes and! no prig; no prematurely ripe prodigy; plows with the same sort of tools that ' no "boy preacher." He was an ac- Joseph knew. It was a crude room quisitive-minded lad, whose brain was lighted only by the door, and fragrant full of wonder, and his parents found with fresh shavings ang chips. him sitting in the midst of the doctors I sat on the floor beside the work-| both hearing them and asking them man, while his boy helper went in and questions." Afid what questions he had out about his tasks; and through my |to ask. . interpreter I tried to talk with him Right here we approach, with awe about the life of a carpenter in Nazar- and diffidence, not only the perpetual eth; but I had poor success, since he | wonder of the awakening of a boy's wanted to talk with me about the pros- soul; but the greater mystery of the pects of a Nazareth carpenter in Ame- self-knowledge of the Christ. Did Jesus at twelve 'know himself to be God? How complete was his consc- iousness of his divine mission? What did he fully mean by his simple ans- wer to his mother, "Wist ye not that 1 must be about the things of my Fa- Nevertheless, it was in such a lowly workshop as this that Jesus learned to fashion easy yokes, after the pattern that has persisted until today; and to make the crooked-stick plow froni " \ IDEAL SUMMER WRAP ~The ideal summer wrap affords slight protection and much the shawl fills the bill perfectly. This one gives he effect of the hand-embroidered and very expensive Spanish I, but it is really made of printed silk fringed with dee fringe, and is comparatively inexpensive. It may bo over any type of evening gown and is mnah in evidence WHIG ther?" If Mary misunderstood her Son-- and the misunderstandings which sen- sitive youth undergoes are its heaviest | cross--how may we be confident that we can encompass the marvel of his mind and of his mission? Children Then And Now. By the lightning flash of his reply to his mother, we may see reveal e seli-subordination of Jesus' su quent course, when he went down to Nazareth with Joseph and Mary, and was subject unto them, exactly like a normal youth of that day when child- ren obeyed their parents He was not "too big for the lowly home or the humble carpenter shop; he never call- ed Joseph and Mary "slow" and "old- fashioned" and "behind the times." Then follows the declaration of the three-fold development of Jesus, which has béen made the basis of count less triangle addresses upon the growth of mind and body and spirit:-- "Jesus increased in wisdom and sta- ture, and in favor with God and man." No boy is ever being symmetrically educated who is not displaying these triple qualities. y Of course, to parents and teachers, this is a lesson upon what God thinks about the importance of getting ready. Thirty years of preparation preceeded the three years of ministry of our Lord. Contrast this example with the life of some of our modern city chil- dren, who are oversophisticated and jaded little men and women before they have fairly entered their teens. We do wrong to manhood and woman- hood to rob them of a real childhood, with quiet slow and orderly growth. The foundations of home-training, of play, of church, of disciplined obedi- ence and labor, and of normal social relationships, are needed in fullest mea sure, if a life is to be strong to with- stand and to serve in the testing years of maturity. We can only understand Christ's three years of ministry by con templating his thirty years of making ready. | a-------- Had A Fine Gathering. Yarker, July 9.--The monthly tea held by the Ladies' Aid was held in the Epworth League hall, Monday night. Mrs. George Lee, Mrs. Wilson and Mrs. Roy Freeman catered to the refreshment part of the pro- gramme, Musical talent gave those present a pleasant time. A Holland, Mrs. Gerald Warner, Mrs. Carl Lee, Winston Holland and Mrs. Holland left here on a motor trip ta North Bay. They will be gone eight or tem days. Mrs. George W. Mason, one of Prescott's oldest residents, died on Monday at the home of her son, George H. Mason, editor and propri- etor of the Prescott Journal. Arthur E. Kelly, B.A, B. Th, pastor of the First Baptist church, Brockville, for the last seven and a half years, has tendered his resig- nation which has been accepted with regret. hen it is p the mustard W i Pe ro Cultivate the habit of taking it with meat, especially fos me It stimulates the digestion an :milating your food. bat if masf be eens - WE SERVE GOOD MEALS Good meals served to your liking. EVENING PARTIES given first class attention, THE VICTORIA CAFE 854 King Street. Siug Lee and Gan Lec, Props. Telephone 762. and GARDEN STEVENSON & HUNTER Tinsmiths and Plumbers . -* - "A little white lie is always side-tracked for a big black one. Delicious Mayonnaise Without Eggs yonnaise makes the salad-- THE ma 1¢ and Carnation makes the mayon- naise -- without eggs -- the smoothest, creamiest, most delicious dressing you ever tasted. So easy to make--so econ- omical too. ' T it--the recipe is given below. And write for the free Carna- tion Recipe Book. Carnation is just pure milk, evaporated to double richness, kept safe by sterili- zation. It is sold by your grocer in tall (16 oz.) cans and in cases of 48 cans. 85-87 Princess Stveet J mend