pbe2 the georgetown herald wadnewuy evening januaiy 1 ith 1939 the georgetown herald fbonb ifo j m moors ukru4 palhaam rnekljr newspaper devoted to the best interests of the town of own and surrounding country including the villages of chan ymtolm norvnl umehouse stewarttown bawnaiad and terra ootttv issued every wednesday evening it the office on main st georgetown subscription rates 150 per year in advance united states 80c additional single copies so both old and new addresses should be given when change of address is requested advertising rates legal notices 13c per line for first in sertion 7c per line for each subsequent insertion readers 8c per line for each insertion if in black face type 5c per line additional notices qualifying as coining events such as concerts entertainments society church- or organization meetings etc 8c per line minimum charge 26c reports of meetings held gladly inserted free in memorian notices 50c and 10c per line extra for poetry birth marriage and death notices 50c small advertisements one inch or less 50c for first insertion and 25c for each subsequent insertion display advertising rates on application although every precaution wlll be takento avoid error the herald accepts advertising in its columns on the understanding that it will not be liable for any error in any advertisement published hereunder unless m proof of such advertisement is requested by the advertiser and returned to the herald business office duly signed by the advertiser and with such error or corrections plainly noted in writing thereon and in that case if any error so noted is not corrected by the herald its liability shall not exceed such apropbrtion of the entire cost of such advertisement as the space occupied by the noted error bears to the whole space occupied by buch advertisement the heraijd does job printing op all kinds on i thank thee now dear god for tcle that birds still fly with brave far- reaching wings that stars come back tides turn ana roses grow that sunlight falls and rain wet blow i perhaps our dreamj arent worth the price we pay so foolishly we seek to plot the way our lives should go help us to understand that thou who puts brown seeds in waiting land who touched five loaves one day in galilee and fed a throng and when a way ward sea once lay between a promised liiij and war rolled waters back oh surely god before we start to doubt the tangled web to d afraid but jesus was not afraid he trusted the living god who makes all things new he told the disciples to arise and not be afraid when they looked up they saw no man sive jesus only now they had the key to the future christ was to be the leader for the centuries to come as moses and the prophets had been in preceding centuries they would not have understood the symbols but right there the disciples were making a thought readjustment from bc to aj henceforth christ was to hve undisputed sway in their lives they would crown him lord of all an english traveller returned saying tmat in india everyone was talking gandhi in russia they were talking lenin in italy they were talking mussolini and in germany hitler he asked in his club why are we not talking chrlil we cannot keepsuentltweare really convinced that christ has the answer for an age that has lost its way the ctow014 16 great hours are needed to help us through the routine of life a man who works in a slum area had a vlsl- make us remember give us faith to prayl there will be peace sometime there will be dawn just for the night help us to carry on helen welshimer peter sees christs glory international uniform sunday school lesson janaary 15th 1939 golden text we beheld hli glory the glory as of the only be gotten of the father john i 14 lesson passage matthew 17 10 1418 o christ of lowly manager birth on whose low cry the ages wait lead us thy way and every day guide us to see what made thee great great hour l 8 what has been the greatest hour in your life up to date was when you were given your first posi tion or when you enlisted or when you were married or when you read some new book or when you formed a new friendship has your highest experience been in personal relation ships or has it been definitely reli gious when you made your decision to be a christian disciple when you took your first communion or some time of spiritual rebirth when through surrender you received a richer bless- ing has the great hour faded or has it lived on with permanent meaning do you now find that one day is very much like another or do your moods alternate sharply between high and low certain experiences stood out in the life of christ his visit to the temple at the age of twelve his bap tism his temptation his transflgur- attoniu8 agony in the garden of gethsemane each one of these ex periences gave direction to his later attitudes and actions the benefit of great spiritual experiences is not in themselves alone but in the commit ments which are lasting throughout our common days fksi and present 36 boaglnauon plays reverently around the transfiguration scene outwardly there was light inwardly there was mental clarification what did mean to jesus and his three disciples would their method be that of ihe law as r by moses ooaes re helpful bat jesus had something higher to give than a code would their method be that of education neo inspiration as elijah had given tb prophets made a noble contri bution to national ufa but christ had something better than ideas and ideals clearly there was to be a fur ther stage of development transcend ing both the law and the prophets we describe it as the gospel area christ was to have a distinctive place a voice out of the clouds sounded saying this is my beloved san wham i am well pelased hear ye him here the three disciple were lpstnr the plan of god they be came contlnoed that christ was not wt i out a plan of his own but that hit 4ypn was in the eternal imf of god they began to set history as progression their religi ons training may have tended u pnodoo a static condition of soul but en the mount with jams they learned r op to a yet b ins we dread toe unknown the prediction of change makes os alrsfd tha dlaaplm on the itoont ofltbmttgvfttton ware almost m a paolo whan they learned that they ossajf flonttms m the statu quo they m thett easts and ware torftomontof town togetnet tney visited the beauty spots the univer sity the parks th mm churches the nil ovsriooktag the lake then the guide returned to the poverty tumble dawn shacks smells and smoke of the etty alum consctoos of the contrast between the wll dis trict and the tenements he was con fident that there must be much more to life than the underprivfleged were getting out of 1l he felt the desire to bring some of the health and beau ty or the hill district into the crowd ed city thoroughfares when jesus and his disciples came down from the mount of transfiguration they were met by a man with an epileptic son the vision of the mount had to be translated into service on the plain after all the mountain top experi ences are occasional and temporary they give us the vision to sustain our dally work we are not lb dream of enjoying great emotional experiences that will unfit us from facing reality in this very workaday world peter james and jotin only had this one mountain- experience the other nine disciples did not have it at all the cure 17 18 we may think that we have good eyeslgnc yet when we look through a telescope we are enabled to see what we could never behold with the naked eye our normal powers of vision are greatly increased by a pow erful lens the dsclples were men ot average powers but when an acute case of need was presented to zhem they were helpless they were trying to live in their own strength and were not using their powers of faith jesus was disappointed at their slow ness and their inability to heal the sick boy bring hun hither to me he said the child was cured from that very hour many christian wor kers are trying u help others by friendship sympathy advice and per sonal influence and they wonder why the results are so meagre the lessjn we need to learn is not to stand be tween the soul and christ to hp others morally and spiritually we nsjd to be selfless and witness to christ who is able to help as we are unable to do our great hours of lilumia- tion with christ are not for our en joyment but that we may know bet ter how to bring others to him questions for discussion 1 what has been the greatest hour of your life 2 do you expect any greater experi ence 3 do your thoughts turn backward or forward 4 what place is christ having in your life today 5 what is christ doing fur your home and community e up byxhtxmhjljpb santa christmas gifts for 100000 kiddles who otherwise would have beep mtos- d by santa glaus was once again ac- hteved by the boy scouts and girl guides of canada working in a chain of toy and doll repair shops stretch ing from the auantio to the pacific the discarded or broken toys were secured with tibe support of local newspapers churches service clubs public schools and the radio m many places toyadnasatan matinees were given by movie theatre managers firemen hi saskatoon edmonton ot tawa chatham and other centres shared in the practical work of mak ing repairing and painting wooden toys in many centres the toy distribution was made in cooperation with the welfare organisations and service cliibtk- scouts of the needy districts of saskatchewan were assisted in meeting the- heavy- demands upon the prairie santa claus by bulk shipments of gifts from eastern toy shops lon don hamilton toronto ottawa mon treal and st johns que other toy shops mailed christmas parcels to in dividual families in manitoba and saskatchewan the scout-ouide-her- ald sunshine toy shop at calgary se cured lists of children from the clergy of every parish between red deer and the u s boundary early in novem ber victoria scouts placed 600 toys aboard the bjc coast mission ship john antle for chritsmas at the boatv ports of call section 0 of the ftou vegetables and honey act of canada states wo pemon shall obstruct any inspector or refuse to permit produce to be in spected or give an inspector a false name or address or other false infor mation the first conviction under this sec tion of the act occurred at bouyn pq when on december s judge armand bolly sentenced an employee of a firm located in mbranda po to pay a one of 300 for unlawfully ob structing a do department of agriculture fruit and vegetable in spector in the performance of his duty and refusing to permit produce to be inspected- it appears that when the inspector was about to inspect a truck- load of produce the truckman caught the inspector by the back of the heck and legs and dragged him from the truck on a second attempt to inspect the truckkmdi the inspector was sub jected to much more severe and rough handling he knew they were scarcely seated before one of them nudged his shipmate and asked what does that word asbestos mean across the curtain pipe down said his companion and dont show your ignorance thats latin for welcome phone magig your great grandfather bad to hew and haul saw and chop but yav need only pbm and presto your coal is on the way to am your connect and economy we deliver famous reading anthr the laundered coal dirt free dust fret mil coal wr beat phone now k c mcmillan phone georgetown that hes your boy and while were still in a fanciful mood lets suppose he has suddenly become seriously ill- then imagine yourself to be in financial difficulties your income never more than 90000 a year has ceased altogether because the factory has shut down temporarily j you think your little boy may be dying the doctor orders you to rush with him to the hospital for sick children you learn its pneumonia of the most serious type that serums alone will cost over 40000 to say nothing of the special graduate nursing and expert medical attention required nor of the cost of hospitalization itself could you be turned away because of this there is only one answer to this question it has been the answer of the hospital for sick children for 63 years a youngsters real need for hospital care and medical attention is the only ticket of admission required race creed or financial circumstances are not consid ered we know the people of ontario want it that way this hospital has met every emergency which has dev during the 63 years of its existence it u famous throughout the civilized world for the success and efficiency of its medical and nursing staffs and for the low cost at which it is operated and who pays for this humanitarian work the doctors give their time absolutely free the ontario qovernment pays 60c per patient per day and the patient or thepatients municipality pays 175 on the same basis that leaves over 100 per patient per day of bars cost for which we must appeal annually to humane and generous citizens this hospital does not share in the funds collected by the federation for community service because patients are admitted from all over ontario this year over 8300000 is needed that means over ten thousand donations if theyuwere to average 800 each or over twenty thousand averaging 400 certainly a staggering total so please make your gift as large as you possibly can if you cannot afford more remem that even a dollar bill helps pay for the care of somebody baby kindly mail your donation to the appeal secretary 67 college street toronto we cannot afford to use any of our muchneeded revenue for canvassers or other organised effort to collect money hospital for sick children 67 college street toronto ojultnotasle and han for toronto passengers sundays only passenger and afau uft i passeng and stall la j passenger sunday ujs n saturdays only leaving toronto 1130 pjn arriving ageaegefcjwsv 1225 ajn phst trip november mb goto nevth man and passenger 4s amj oouu sooth mall and passenger 6jj3 pa gray coach lines time table fm effective sunday september utkt vjj leave oeoroeiown to toronto a 708 ajn 928 ain 1148 asa c 223 psa 438 pin 648 pjn 903 pjn 9jj5 ajn xll20 ajn 2x6- pjn afr55 pjn ay445 pjn 700 p bo00 pjn dxll05 pa exll50 pjn a except sun and hoi b sun and hol o sat only d except sat sun and hoi e sal sun and hoi z to kitchener y to stratford tickets and information at w h long 89 directory ltox dakjc kc m sybil bennett but barristers and souettera georgetown ontario office gregory theatre bwg aim at langdon barrister sottettor notary psfcaa first mortgage money to loan office main street south phone 88 p b watson das kjxb georgetown office hours to 5 except tlmisasf afternoons db j e jackson deaths xbay office hours dairy 9 to s evenings 7 to 9 phone txaw oeobgetown frank petch licensed atjctioneek taa oswuues ef peel and be prompt service cheltenham 26 r 23 george alrl post office cheltenham walter t evans c general huunmce ocean steamship usicx bla st ihrtk oaiil us ooootat send ttapi in ttwhr kelly 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