g "Thursday, Dev er 2, 1920. a 14 i 4 { \ ? . "(1 8; 18-14, 19-22). s'pose ye know," she says,' 'some kid 'Who'd stone these raisins quick, An' eat a few, an' if he did Tt wouldn't make him sick?' 'An' then) T stone 'em just as fast, " fay aside s few 'To eat "et alf at once; they last Lota longer. if you do. An' then she puts in other stuff An' stirs to beat the ban' An' stops an' says; 'Guess that's enough," An' pours it in the pan, An' when shew through an' all the rest, An' slammed. the oven. door, 'Then_it'gxhe time I love the' best, 'That I've been waitin' for. Christ receives what the devil ho' phen "ld sh man tr, fe seas a tee, it and wi an by 'om M se 6 Bhe looks nt me an' smiles a lot Eg AL Bt ce i pes An' leta tme scrape the dish! Per se oe M lsten. Christ sows good seeds in His field, --By Dorothy M./Strobeck the devil comes by stealth and sows tares. é = -- e parable brings out very clearly the NOVEMBER STRAWBERRIES | ersonaity of the devil, the certainty of his | Penetang Herald-- Frank Corbeau in-| existence, the malignity of his heart, the formed us last week that he had picked sctivity of his movements, the cunning of | strawberries on his island up the bay on|his operations, 'the rubtlety of his methods. Tuesday of Inst week. He slso ateted that |If there is not a pertonal devil, the enemy Ae erie us a post card for a free tar pring 4 and B you use Rural Route No. 1, Muscouche, Que., Oct. 15, 1919: 'The Minard's Liniment People, BSire--I feel that I should be doing o piaoy Wt mesionted v0 rte ye. T have had four tumors growing on my bead for years, I had them' cut off by s surgeon about 15 years ago, but they grew again, till about 8 months ago I had one as and shaped like » Jady's thimble on verg place 'where my hair should be parted, it was getting so embarrassing in public that it was » constant ory me, About 3 months ago I got 6 of your Tini- ment for 'snother purpase and saw on the tabel, good for tumors, Well, I triéd it and kept iat it for exactly 2 months, with the result that it has entirely removed all trace of the tumor, and were jt not that they.had been cut 15 years'ago, no mark would be ween, I have not been asked for this teeti- 'monial and you can use it as you see fit. (Signed) FRED. C. ROBINSON. P.8.--I am a farmer and intend using Minaed's Liniment on my mére for a strain ed tendon and am hoping eee ee Personal Greeting Cards for Christmas, 1920 ' The rapidly increasing custom of sending Christ- mas Cards carries much happiness in its train. i ' 'f 5 Our soda_ biscuits, are breads closest ' es and a perfected. product of a sunshine Bakers of better biscuits for .sixty-two years. ; ae .¥ ; 4 ia . ey ' jai IN'WOMEN'S REALM shed Jt ie to be regretted that every woman | Robert Paul to m: in town could not have heard the admir. |in the early 1806's able uddress on "Child Welfare" given by | himself, to accommodate a foir customer, Mim McCallum of Churchill .at the Novem-|would sit down at s weaver's pirn in his| Callum, having taken the social service |skein of thread on it for her. He charged cours: in connection with Toronto Univer- | her half w cént for this courtesy. plewing personality and natural manner|it back to him and he wound it full of added to: the enjoyment of the address. | thread again. A heerty vote of thanks was passed to Mim) The fourth-generation of Clarks are now McCalnm at the close of the meeting. | making the cotton thread you use today. s |Clark, » pansing thought when you throw 'the vines were quite green and quite sjof Christ, the parable is mesninelew. There 1k. spite of the"unfuvorable weather there uway the next empty dies could number of them were in full bloom, in absolutely no necemity in the drapery wae» fair attendance at the meeting held not do that in 1812. 'wmemmnmmememesmmmmammmummemenn {01 th? parable to bring him in. He is in the at Mr, R. W. Sloan's. Although Mis There were plenty -of other things they able because he existe in fact. The her trip to New Zealand, Mrs. Robert Boyes | oid days. Thrift came nnturally and of ne- "\teows "'sons of the kingdom" by sowing pave wo +8 nai scoant af tbe seerss jcewity in a world where inventions were | A SERIES OF TALKS food peed, "the word of God a a h ' not looking to waste and coinfort. Wooden 'sows "sons of the evil one" by sowing bad freatly sated for atending. Plane were poole were never thrown away; thinble, ON MUSIC « read, doubts end questions and error fon, 4: 2 jb in the near future, axtl the socia-| it the household. afforded, Tt wae kept|| BY Prof. C. C. Laugher, Mus. Bue. |), work whi Ment He alwayn ve i + . A pless:g luneheon. be kept. AIGIOAL PEOULIARITIES Fett tarediee Near fagl ia ' We are all'sufficiently,human to rejoice in the - ------ One bonnet, one shawl, one dress did al- 7 Saari Chrinti id miniet dot He i WHEN THREAD WAS FIRST SOLD ON mont a 'ifetine: too, for material were| © musician on being introduced t0 8 brings inthe. aubt tins of disc rid ledge frat we sate in the thoughts and good SPOOLS hard to obtain and' dresamakers few in hear you are a music writ-) delity ("higher eriticiams, wishes of our immediate friends. : + replied the strauger. | masked ountheism ("Christien Science kmt'i.g wool it now, and women had to clo'hés and the clothes of their families, = , ' ' lores the akeins und wind it into little|they did not encourage frequent change in | ance, us Tam willict: | we wake up to find the inging finest line of Personal Greeting Cards ever shown balls. But 9 progremive manufacturer, | fashions. jan averewers: aries, the hh t. When the in Barrie. Call at the office and see them or ring Phone 194 and we shall try and have a sample book sent you if you live in town. "f ¢ 4 Se Tasty at any Ask Your Grocer For Jersey Cream 1 SODA i BARRIE WOMEN'S INSTITUTE James Clark. got a wood turner named f ber nueeting ofthe Barrie W. 1 Miga Me-/own shop, while she waited, and wind the sity, knew whereof she spoke, and a very | ~ When the spool was empty she brought CHURCHILL WOMEN'S INSTITUTE Give the courtly old business fellow, James King did not arrive to give the lecture on could not do and wouldn't'de in those good , tares in the world sre his work. Christ to hold » concert given by 8 dram-|tisted u lifetime, and one needle was often 10), The devil did bility of the afternoon was added to by the| as carefully as such s treshure deserved to | (ee Thrall wus at firat soll in hanks, as ber. Wh thei pad i a in by number. en women wove their own then added, "I am. giad| Toned, panthelam | (/icstion Beben For' this season The Examiner has secured the bus sceking inspiration for 9 song. | adore Thoms, the pioneer conductor | who did more to educa'e the American pub- lic than any other musician, was wise, in il on his day. He was always on the lookout | 'children of the de for dainty titbits of music and would take! two classes are not always distinguishable infinite pains to make them effective, -He|of renarsble ot the ou'set (ve 20. 30), but arranged Schumann's Traumerei to end) they will be distinguished and eeparated muted strings to desrescendo in the | when they gre ripe, the one for heaven and | extreme and instructed the strings to con- | he other Yor hell. But it will fortunately. tinue drawing the bow scroes Che strings 'be the angels snd not men who do the sep- without making a sound, The' sudience | History urnisbes count- imagined it till heard-the sounds floating off to an immeasurable distance till Thom: | as broke the spell by quietly lying down sowing. tares +. Ino, 13:2; Ac. tory and the Word of God warrs us sgsinst deciding that all thet sppeare "among the wheat" must elf be whest. While the tares were not distinguishable from the whest until they ney' T was one of the class of /begen to grow, Ybey were tares from the 1700 in New Hampshire, the semion being | very first. There were.those who wished held at the home of one of the members {to root up the tares at once, but the time 'and sometimes in the schoolhouse, boards | Was not ripe, nor were they competent to being. placed across the kitchon chairs to|'he task. There are those who in haste "| answer for seat form of a circle, with 'long to extirpate "'the sons of the evil the singing master in the centre, The maz-|at-once from the world. but the M ter comfienced by -saying, Now follow me |says "let them both erow up together up and down. He would then sound a note/TIL THE HARVEST." Premature sep: and we would sound the note after him, |ation. by religious persecution would me: 'At the close of the session the singing mes-|injury to wheat ax well as des'ruction to 'agreed to give instruction for one abil. |tares, This, history hax abundantly proven. nce per night and take his! This, parable does not forbid church dis- pay in Indian corn. The men members {eioline, "The field, is"--not the church, paid Yor the tuition while the girls sup the world" (v. plied the candles for lighting purposes. Al I hy been said that musical inspi n rT. m met! ihe does not a'tack,all musicians in th | Jn the deley in sen i way. Here is one that I think is the|from the wheat we have another illustra- gest origin of any composition that I) tion of God's lone-suffering (cf. 2 Pet. 3:0). can recall. It is that of Scarlatti in his} II. Two Harvests, 30. Cat's Fugue." The composer often had}. Separation comes at last, It is 'in the his favorite eat on his shoulder as he sat|end of fhe age" (30, R. V., Marg.). "The at the spinet. One day the oat beoame | reapers 'pre the angels." 'They are to be seared at something and, springing from his |the ministers of God's boundless. grate t6- shoulder, ran across the key-board and | ward "the sons of the kingdom' and the away, but in her flight sbe struck several | executioners of His wrath toward "the sons notes on the d which Scarlatti af-!of the evil one."\ The tares bre to be terward made into's fugue in her honor. thered"' and the wheat is to be "gather- Brahms, the great: music writér, hated but the one for burning in "the fur- possessed 'a hig! of fire," where there is inconsolable ief ond impotent rage (v. 42), the other into God's storshguse, 'the kingdom -.of thein'Father,"" whefe "they shall shine forth as the wun." Is the fire literal? It is in the interpretstion of the parable as well aa in the parable itself,. Evil is not to gradually disappear from the world but to grow ride by side with the wheat "until the harvest." IV, Outward Growth and Inward Rot, evan | 81-28. oe 'Two more parsbley of growsh" and still "tho kingdom of heaven." The mustard shows the marvelous outward Imitated--never équalled i There is as much difference be- tween Sunlight Soap and its + Imitators as there is between sunlight and | artificial light Why? Absolute purity with superior cleans! powers--more woap for your money--you get them in Sunlight Soap | LBVBR BROTHERS LIMITED TORONTO jONT Awe the same rich, full-flayored tea. Sold only in the sealed air-tight Red Rose Carton: pean TAMA GOOD pian6 isa fine thing toown; jut a good Player Piano is better. The Player stands ready at all . times for hand playing or for}repro- ducing, as desired... _ . It is interchangeable. in a from one instrument to the other, member of -your family who. cai read-a note of music (but who ma: a. very musical 'person neverthel ess) can play-the, music of his. choice. Another member who. is skilled-in music can come next and play. just as. if it were a pigno, And, for the rising generation it makes easier the road to a.successful musical education, © - _ The Williams Player is a Canadian- made instrument, through and --made-by Canadian craftsmen: wi : would refuse to do ing. it their |" Come in, Tell us what they are, Listen to @ fascinating test, The New Edison is all the living artist can be, --excepting his physical presence, 'Weill prove it,--throogh your own self, 'Weill have the New Edison Re-Create those family favorites, --and : have, you listen, {n'a Ra Test x 'Ask for it, Get your own proof that the New 'Edison i hGal, 5:8, 9). The woman, an spostate arch, mized 'the feaven' of false doc- '\trine (Mat, 16:6, 12) in, the. children's +l bread and. the. whole doctrine and. life of . Jeavened. .History~ falfill- vail the thrills, joys and. witch. eciea which your family prises in ite most "The J. M