._r,_ ».‘ .- ~_ alilal “Weekly News' Wlila Graham lellanaa DG!! Slllllllgl Lovely MAT. EVl.‘| hill i*\ Dancing Beaadsai TBAPIISTUIUIUI ggi giggglgifrg iiidii iii .glilliliél g.r § sri _B s F5! elllzliglli ill; uri i rl §‘ =IrI 2 ill l.i1 tion. The subieii of 11'. evening sumon dealt wih vigor. Liddlea 'ln lovely are Dirsllind' 'auasimgvlfyinmhilw dyby|&!oar'lB\u'na(oorkai- I iol _ 5.4%) SUNG 118 Alareaaowdofshadmtaalli voungpeoplaatsandad tha song sn-vice at st. r»auu~Ansli=an Uhurehlastevenlva union with cuff G bi - thrill-packed drama-oafsugerg musical that is a new mile- stone ill screen entertainment! RIII.ICIOUS SERVICES '-1934 - .e5EEEEdhEa-25.._.-_-==-=-aa--=-_--_--aa-a-__-__=-_Z52LASE£2EiZ2EEl222iLe£§¥§§2££§==.=.==-====- . . ===. ee.. . SIIIIIIDIIIEAIII, Stock Quotations f§'§.”}§‘,'_'“f§Z‘§§ or MR. 0 Pivotal New Montreal ` has the world “at her dancing feet! HAT. IVI. samuel i=ussi:5uu:=z:= l_... -- ALSO “O” “IIUIIDIG lVl_l» lAlllNB` IUIIOAL BUILIIQUI ON “GIAND HMIU’ _li "” Prominent Summer- , W, side Citizen Passes rniunv Suddenly On Satur- day Aftemoon. York Stocks (Cal ltarlra Close Stock Market (CanUdiaaa Press) Clone Allied Ch-~m Am and F Pow .Lin Smell _ ._ ___ _ _ Ain Tel und Trl . __ A1111:-11111111 _ _ A _ -_ . , ... ._ ,. _ lieth .\`lFr‘I _ ihainnlu Dry ... .. . ., C P li ... ... . _ i3n,._. _ _ (Special io 'Hao Guardian) It was with sincere reslet that citizens of Bummerside learned of the very sudden death on Satur- day afternoon of Mr. John B. Ram- ay, who passed away without 'warning in the libby of the Post Office where he had gone about 3.15 p. rn. to get his mall. Mr. Ram- say was standing by the desk on _the east side bores and had ap- parently IU-It taken his mail out of his box vmen he suddenly fell to the floor. Gentlemen near him and the al authorities rushed post to his side and Dr. McPhee was Ioan in lorious re- ==.=====.._..=.-_ suirguuuuu ui itlég’§i§.2§§§§§§§§;§l§§§l tigl gsgigiglil ig .5 5g;=§,g§ ‘ii-s s5‘? 5 555 isgils Eiiégg 'iisi 253 gsfig Efigsé I Eg? gr ellow- I IIOLYIIDIIICIUEI l'°1‘14N'°d atthe(l\urchofthal(ostH0b l1adaemarysdai'1inymorniq.i|al- Qwaraattha \||ualho|n'a_Rav. Patharilaming foaoaml aam\m|at`all'ths atndng obiigatimsd E l'I.'. PAUL1 CIUICI s Ei 8 15.1: §$ ‘called from his office and came immediately to the scene. After an examination he said death had came to Mr. Bam-say almost in- stantaneously from heart failure. l The body was removed to Oomp- ton’a Undertaking Parlors and Dr. Tanton the Coroner was called but after consulting with Doctor Me- 1Phee considered an inquest was not later taken Street after t. alen passing had gently as possible .stricken wife and da mr. John simpson Ramsay was years of age and was all his life lated with the firm which ll nrown as the Hall llanufsct- Oornpany and of whidh he vioa president. He was born in Bummerside and was the a0l1 Of the late Donald Ramsay, a proin- inant shipbuiider of the times- A!- te; being educated at the summer- side school he entered the employ f'1‘homas Hall whowasamanu- fasturer of farm implements. H0 became keenly interested in 01° business and being studious and naturally clever he invented wllh Thomas Hall the Halls thresh- whidh was suoeestuily P¥l°°'1 the market. ' ‘ l - About forty elehr. asv in 'company with Mr. Ea-ll and the late william H.. Manson he became rs; fl gm?" =g§E%g iiiii 2 O 'Sag l Con Gu! ._ _ _ _ ., Corn Product! Delaware and Ilud .__ l-J ati 11 nun in-11 misc _ lien Fundin __ ___ _ (ian iilnmra . lnl llsrvesicr ._ , ini Nlckvi __ _ _ _ Xa! Blsvuli ,_ _ .\ y mill-1.1 _ _\.»r|h .iiiim-<11. _, _ lmii .<1-r .\ .1 _ _ .. ..._ 1111.111. , ' _`_'_ jj srsnu nil N .1 Tex Gulf Ifnlon <`11rlii1i,, ,__ _ ____ l'i\lun I'11~-ifu: ... _.__ i'n||r~<| 1't»r|i , _ _ _ 1' s lim-1,.-_ , _ _ I' .\` SIPPI _ _ _ ,_ _ ‘_ nnsiiiurn . ... ... ._ \\'1~.-ri11ghi»1\re .__ _ lvoolwnrtir _ , libisnn _ ._ ,__ Auliurn .\io|ur __ _ r.'1ms|»l»ure and ohio _.I 1.14 1,4 1 0 aoli rr; lol# 114111, :i-_~ 41114 :.1 15% 'lu 4.~i-it 40 13 will aiili 211,; 311;. :is‘/z 41 23% 40 ' ziiilll uw, dn 7'... 111; :lun 15% :ii 6’/ir lm, 56% 21*/| 40\\i, 51 9/; I Bathurst A ._ . . Bell Tel . lirualliln ._ Fun i`ur _ i‘l1r i’11r l’fii ._ ._ ('zn\ Ind Al A ... _ I l' ll 1 __ . llom ilridge _ _ Dom Nfeel Coal B ... . lint Nickel . _ Massey Harm. _ _ McColl Front _ . . Montreal Power _ Nat }irew_._._ _ l'uwer Corp Qui-bbc l’uwcr .. . Snarviiilgan ._ Htoani of Can . ~ . _ Winnipeg El _ _ 'r' ]IlI l'_“. sl, 1 1:,,.__ Ili 1111,, :ui 4‘.£ 21:10 ew. 111.. Ci'I"1¢ 2114, .. 1.1 is _ 21,, 111 3 lkflfiln (flllfll ° ( Btofkn B A Oil iieiauhnruoia Dorn Ping _ imD Toii ,_ lml’ Oil Int Pele .__ ___ _,_ _ Walker Pfd ,., , fauadiau Press) . 1. Clone is al ,_ 2 x -I; » ,_ _ is 1:11. _ 22 5 Fish Quotations (Canadian Press) r1.is'roN_ res 24- Wholcsa.ie:- large cod 8% to 7% cents lllrket 6% to 71,1, menu. Haddock 15% to 7% cellll. Cusir 6'/5 to 7% cents, Flounrlers 61,5 to 10 cents. (lray Soles 11 to I3 cents. Pollock 5 to 6 cents. Hake 7 to 8 cents. Haddock-Scrud 6 to 1 cents. a pound. PRo_1iucE_ (Cna\.aa'l_ia|a Prollg MONTREAL, Feb 28- utter lull eggs were features of the Montreal dslry and produce market during ins! week's trading, both rising to new top levels for the winter susan to date. Continuation of cold weather, low production and light ltocka ltrvngih- uned the butter market on the ons hand, while on the other hand lup- plies of distributors became abort with demand good. Egg aup.pllea were iight and demand for avai ble offer- ings vraa brisk, The button market ended the week ai. 29% to I0 cents a pound for no 1 grads which compared with closing ing quotations of 21 to 21% cents at the cloae of the previous week. 2 to_\he_lIl'fhlI1Il ohiidran. W hmliay School was held fra' all ehildrenintheafternoonattne ming. racitatimof i oftbeasrlaa sacraments lhthulally. G of labl- E % u iii 2 ii i i ll § 3 iiiilllla iiiigggil isis; llilillri ii 5¥§§§ .3 gil §l§r§;I§§i in §%£ r ' sis; r E i iisié ;l ilgliii _r_ E Els; Pg; lylluuiui § 'gp g igslgé ihlii. llliii :1l1l.il le Hitlilw "l'l-lI|fl'Y'UNl'l'll)ClUl£B Ihr-Jmsthan Irma number ,funsal service l E I r l woridlinel. t rea * mmm, M -1-hom" gm Q,mp.| oraded shipments inuoaniou ea F... .lu ui-u-1 --mo - -ue ,::.°1'1.‘:;:“‘.2'.‘ .tr tl ...°.:“;;.'.°.'.°.': patronage among farmers thloush- alum and 42 to is mm roi- A puusu guy, um Mlritime `Pi0vIn¢$. lb. aboutlthrea tzlfivls eenta above the Blu Wand “vm th” “rm and vr;II>ei.(:t!;§l'I:eed .alfo§:°`stead!. Prices °”° “*° “““‘ """‘.......‘ wx. .§'.i~::..:1.._»:::~:_.:-5:..':,f..:‘°;.z:.°:-.:r.: 'lm “um” md y n M, sr os to S115 amfso pound bags or I-U0 damn °! M3' Mun” ' ' Prince Edward island mountains from wright sm nut. nhl; mtegziw M2- uso is r1.as_._ , _ B. T. Ifoimnn I NCS WUI" ’ 4,130( ajoint storxcompany nor' known as the HL; Maniifacturiim company. ur. runway iff-lived hi* interest in the business and was mme vies president which office he held at the time of his death (cwdhl rn", although he was not actively PH' iurrcaao, 1~'.~u as-nys 10011 rue -ed in “M bww 1z‘::'°.:f.:.1:.°'“::.i‘: '°°..';:1':.“'ll; M13 R»5m5‘7 '” wen versed In cents impurlug considsruba strength e . “Cry hrihith 01 dfllm mxhllilm 11tE?tme: tofozgerjgrainmt rye thouih mmmwtunng |_g applied ees o e uinp o _ l i 1 n t, f la hDWl¢dI0 If sm business whah yveer: dxileotlrgervs-inute;v v;Iieat.I1ell':It:1rY IIB III! Illel WUI* and H5115 ' noting as 11 beuriah Influence. Belief came well known for their many rua: import, or 1-yu into me united itat I lh bl lcd Ir I imprmemmu in farm implement* roapgrsillfille fzinbehiiior- ov?-the. zlcyla Mr. Ramsay was of a very fe"-“H5 nurse 'run ueuer was sues on digpggitiug but had lfil-Hy atlllnfih statements current that a counter- nhnda who ‘ppmchted his 51;”-_ railing duty lagalnlt gouutiis g;i\'eu by '1'hespeakarf<1rthaaervisewal`a,.:“::.;|_ an-_ W. I. Bentley. who spoke of uns struggle of the Great Wm' during which most of his haarlli s°eraborn,an1ieoasaparoditwiih_‘ the great leonoanio struqie which ihe youu; od today an entering. 'The Ninety and nine” wls ss- luisitely rendered-by Mil Vain Rodd. and Mrs. Francis Hail- 'lrsinor and llr._ Percy Willianl “ns va-y sriastivny "Holy raahsr. 'Sheer our Way.” Scripture lnon was read by Mr. Anhui YOO. md MP. Hugh Boott acted as chairman Lantem slidu were again used and ldded greatly to the suooel of the nr-vice. To all “Y assisted the KOA. extend §.g iii El III IEHIIIIIHI ln loving memory of Jennie B. Muttart. beloved was of w. w. Mutter?-. 8um|neni&_ who passed *Way February 2|, 1882. Inserted by hinhand and ehild- “W L-dll IIB! hill.-M, gg " '_ land mum, lo Mr. and Uhamttetawu, IACDOUAIL-M §|\°3i»lU4. Eg eudiégggz i J §;n _'£2555 i;-it _;-L J 8' Q “V sun nes of the lbw" if i itll _ §, §3§;E§§ Es Sgigég tiiellliiiglletsl i8E8sE§rB§§; giik iii-ig-iii-=l-fri 153i gr E ligggig l§§;?Ei*§.§s§§i=§. glgéllgl Elia ‘li .lrarllilliilirr who digrtedhrother. f an-viossundavmornlhe smaeeansyouom iuv- Brown,lLA.,;~seadie¢f.‘l‘ha tum lessons were the Dist aisolute I0 versed l-10. har. whostatednusdsieetal begins at voor' “fm” ”*‘"“”h¥SffLs "LU DGKIN oomionending same e theutbt xg The the tlllllr. if use hills ..p .,§s is l Ergi 5’ eonsidered.Paa1m I1.-C mm “§|odeltril¢LIil\tha¥ noondafandaoitis risestothetzsnithxs thenstarts - presentedwero to'l“l-V4 ourliveal>eooming°°@"‘°°°‘I incl li)-end wal 'Come Bohubenfs § ""3»§l>"v‘i‘§’i~|°l'1r°"“-”‘ lm ABD rsrlasn I’am¢NaE'aan;aAio;J¢{;\“I0¢ 0'0"* Mafkea A tome' oi as L. irenosaia _ "‘:‘..':ii.1.‘.‘, °E...‘* °’l‘2‘.il.."1 G l a n~ c e naaanl -_H 'WF' FWHM (oaaaaaaa rms; 'toronto and lontroal-ltoeka clos- ¢ ll lower, *Y 'ruroare_ lllaos-lrrogalasdy lower. New York-lloeka eased lower. ”W`:ai|og-Wheat closed slightly *ew York-ihaallan' dolar Ia- iwlal It DQ. ling ¢ha.rseteristics of heart and mind. He was a member of the Hu-am and I_ebona.n Lodge of the _Ancient Order of Masons and was 'me of the oldest and best inform- I led Masons in the Province. He could never be prevailed upon to take any high office but he was a Past Grand Warden of the Grand Lodge of Prince Edward Is- land and one of the Senior Past Masters gi Hiram and Lebonan Lodge. The deceased leaves to mourn lhls widow. formerly Miss Elllll ways or summer-side his dsushter_ zicna. Mrs. John 5. Wright. one brother W. A. Ramsay of Hono-, lulu and two sisters. M11 5'1"" 41-licks, Lynn, Mass.. and Mrs-I Ernest Roberts, Brocton, Mass., to whom much sympathy ls EKU-!Hd¢d in their sudden bereavement. | I 'rho funeral takes puree ihisi Monday aftemoon at 2 p. ru. from' his late residence under Masonic Orders. Rev. W. H. Harding will conduct the services assisted by Rev. Carlyle Watterworth. lriuib Home (harsh MONDAY |30-C. CI. I. T., Intermediate and Junior. 'HD-'l‘rail Rangers. 1.80-Willing Circle of the Kings - Daughters-Monthly meeting -ladies’ Parlour. 'l.»-Oomlnittee of Stewards, spe- niher connrrea wou IPD! u ryo imports from Poland and elsewhere. Rye clniieri ni-rvriutl. 7111!; above yesterdays finish, wheat at ‘£1-§L net decline, rorn unchsiiged to 1,; higher, nuts 'fr-‘A off, and provisions un- changed to .5 ctiiga down. \\'|NNlPEG_ Fe 25- CLOSE Wlmnt: liisy 07%; July 69‘5A. (isis: May 36‘<',ll; July Ii-'1f.i.A. liaiiey: May 11%; July 42558. OASH PRICES Wheat: No 1 bard NIM: No 1 nor M-';i; No 2 nor 01%; No 3 nor M153; No 4 nor sm; No 11 541,51 No s 51%: Feed 50%; “.i‘r1rrk tl»i‘,§; .\'o 1 duruiu 0144 _ rin.; No 2 rv xv 3111;; so s C iv .'il’§; Ex 1 feed 3214; Na 1 feed 30411 No 2 reed 21155: ri-J.-end 21%; Trask 33%. lisirey; llalting grades: 6 row 4-xr! (‘ \V 475%; 2 row ex 3 (‘ W -i_'1M_ Other gra es No 3 C W SING; -\U 4 (TW38l§;N05C\V3’I',§;r\`oG(IIV _ .- ,, 36%. lrnrk 395|. \\‘l)4`\'IPI~I_(}, Feb '.’aY-\Vh4°sf Fri:-eil hold romparvitiroiy firm iiaturrley and rlmiod the abbreviated session with gains nf IA cent \'ni1rmr rlvrlini-rl frariiouslly in enr- ly trading rirr/~ to weakness at Llvrr~ pool and r‘hlr-nga, but a little buying ut borinm levels brought vniura hm-k. .\iny wheat r-loud at 675.1 with July \ at MA Export iiuainasa was thin however and it was only with the aid nf iirhf offerings that a higher level ni’ prices wns maintained in the latter half of the session _ Chleago's 1-asier irc-nd was attribut- ed tn quiet lienvy snows in the ilriit 'llarry Il .. .. . ~ . a _» ~, od Etnies winter wheat area At the B .\le¢als ... ... _ ._ 1:~ bottom Phil-nun was off ahoni one Boar . ._ ... ... .. ... .a 14 4--nt vrhll, Llwrpool wheat aagged H1- Md. i’sual litnrdny dullnaaa prwailrd in rash grains. and coarse [min fut- ures were rinlnteresting, prices mov- l\L fl( (f(J7?l9 ( Canadian Proaa) Stull gl." Amer Cyan B ._ ._ ._ lst; Amer Sup Pow _ _ 31;. Cities Serv .. . . . . ._ 313 El Bond and Bbsro lil' Nils Hud St illnd IZif(Zf1¥iIVl2l? (Canadian Prods) MONTREAL, Feb 35_BrItIlh and foreign exchengo in relation to the Canadian dollar, aa compiled hy the Royal Bunk of Cansdl. closed Satur- day ll followu- Argentina peso 2815. Australia pound 4_0‘:‘0_' Austria lehilling 11106. Belgium beiga 2337. Brasil mllreis .0005 China Hong Kong dollars .$062. Czechoslovakia crown .04l8. France franc .0066 Germany relchlmark 3980 Glwat Britain pound 5.1101 t Holland flnrin _$745. l Hungary pengo 2967. india rupee 8&2. italy lire 0062. Japan yen C1021. .Yugoslavia diner .i-_ l New Zealand pound 4 07/8 iwrsnd non Jim. l South Africa pound 5.0960 Spain ta .l35i). 7 80% pose Sweden krone ,___ Rwillerland frane .$38. United States dollar 19-82 pe! rent premium. Currencies l. | (Canadian Press) NEW YOBK_ Feb 24-'l‘i‘1:idIug on the Foreign Exchange markets pro- ceeded at a dull pace last week. 'l`l1r\. final session on Saturday was devoid of interest with loadlux currencies holding to frai-tional changed. Canadian dollars finished the short aedsinu unchanged ar 00% centa. Pound; sterling closed 54 cent higher at 501% and French gold francs flrmed 5-5 point against United States funds tn 0.56 cents. MONTREAL, Feb 25-The pound l¢¢1'|l“¥ flrmed slightly on Montronl Foreign Exchange Saiiirrisy as the French fivmc continued unchanged and the United States dollar weakened fractlouall _ I Oiltfllng at $6 I0. the pound moved within narrow limit' to finish the day at 8511, |111 half a viii. from Friday The franc 1"|u11|i1e,l .ut 11.50 cents and tho dollar der-linml L32 ui’ one r1~r cent to lil-32 percent. premium. AIQZTVIDVIY (Canldlan Press) ’I‘0ll0NTU_ i1`ei1 ::.$»_\`:irrovr lmrsos and gains with losses Ln f.h¢, major- ity marked Saiurd1iy'a session of tho Toronto Exchange mining division. Business was again slow in the sen- lon issues while secondary gold snrl penny shares wen- sr-tive and siirr-r stocks turned orrr in gum] vnlinno Oil stocks showed no changes ni' pnrtsirice outside of a drop oi' 4 1 in for (‘algsry and Hdfnonion anti lor Chemical Research, Noruuda frilly recovered FriIul1avli» ... ... ... . ... Fabyan ... ... v a --- --- ... ooda use ... ... ... ... M Goleonda -. ... ... ... . . lm Goldiiin a-. ... ... .-. ,... _ . » .aa a.. ._ ... _ 7\ .. 1.'l'| C1011 _ . 1__~1 . all m-°°tm¢~ ing over a narrow range. 1:11 llal ... ... .. iyxil _ 1 *__ ,_ i mantle ’i‘ .., ... . . ... it 1 '\.`a'i0 (fill 'ff 1 ...am __ Il ._ ri 2 a.. 21 ... R625 17 ve. U ... 2|! a.. I7 ...IN Goldflfld ... ... ... ... ... ... 3-_'Q Grahalll ... ... an ... ._ - M; Granada ... ... ... ..- ... .__ I Halrrvw ... ... ... ... ... ... 301| Barker ._ ... . . ... ... ... .. 1': . ... .. ... ...122 1 ii.‘i".’.’..~.f _'.1 _.: of-_ Km Hns ... ... __ ... ..._ZZ 22* ...";;: .iii “What is the Bible" was the sub- ject of the sermon delivered by Rev. Dr. R.. Moorhead Legals at St. James' Church yesterday morning. This was the second of ii pre-Eas- ter series. Following was the sermon: IX Peter 1~2l-"H0ly men of old spoke as they were moved by the Holy Ghost." Suppusing I were addressing a iialhrruis of People who knew nuth- lnir of the Bible, or u literary soci- ety which was mainly interested in the Bible as a book, I would deal very differently with the subject of the Bible from the way ln which I um lcd to do this moming. Be- CRUSS. Sl>€aking_.a5 I am, to a con- gregation of Christian people who accept tho Bible as Gods Book, and who prufr-.s_s to use it us their guide to salvation, I feel limi I necd do little more than to rr-fresh your minds about the importance and preclousness of the Bock. In spite of what are culled "!1br‘rzrl vic‘.vr." ?\h0l1f. thc- Blhiv, rw- run luv flint our Churr-li ns is wimlr- 1»..~ud_r, hy. ally L0 the old cuncr-lution of the Bible which is expr;-.,s1wrr>x1.~', krirnvrr ihr'.uuhout the whole world of ilu' zuiclvnls, To- day tlicrc .irc but lr irw szid ruins to rimrk that sczrt ni :lic niighi.y_ Today whnt _vnu sm- 11:. you seek for tt.hi‘ proud c11_v of 'I\'1‘r arc a few broken columns tvlling of its for- and find the only resting- our souls. If there ever was h1I!1Ill1lo!BihlinIl'09llI¢1. assi ass; 9.25: I our text that “h¢ly. ‘ d spoke as they wen AQ the Holy Ghmt? ~~ _ Another convincing evidence J the divinity of the Bible is funi:-' ed by its vital power. The very forC’ of God flows through its pagesfgip' ing it a perennial freshness and vib- slity which no other book has. There are some of you who read your Bible regularly. yet you never' tire of it. its most fiunillar passages never grow stale. You all hear if. read and explained and enforced here in our church se_rvlces from week to week, and Yet it is ever new, and its bo.si.-known verses un- fslluigiy interest and hold you no matter how frequently you hear them. Other books grow old \and pass into obscurity and oblivion. Scientific books of even fifty years ago are out, of date today, behind I the times, useless to inform a swift- l ly-moving world. But the Bible holds its own as the one book com- ! pletely adapted to the needs of men land women today as much as-is was before its ink was dry. It l by fri: thc largest circulation of any fbook 111 tI.c world fudiiy. und, in thc I i-iri-u:n.-.t.:1n<-r.~, that could only be 1 the rose with a book oi which it is Maid--"holy mon of old spoke as they ‘Wore moved by the Holy Ghost.”`."Z`, I Anil lastly, the highest. c\'idcr& of all for ilic divine- sources of tht* Bible is that it changes tin- hear-L and life and leads the soul back to God. This is so evident., so weli- known to everybody, that it requires no elaboration. There are those be- fore me this morning for whom the Bible has done this. There are thosl known to you for whom the Bible has done this. Blessed by tue Spir- it of God, the reading of this Book is daily working the miracle of lead- ing men and women out, of darkness into light, and out of death into life. We should by every means possible seek to get at the iremel_ the very heart and centre of what the Bible is and why it was given to us. There are a thousand reasons why we ‘ should value the Bible. There is its literary charm which makes it so well worth our reading for the sake of its purity of style and beauty of expression. There is the invaluable mass of historical annals which it alone contains. There is the human appeal of it, the biographies of men and women like ourselves in their' .struggle with the problems of life. There is the uplift of lt, the stimulus you find on every page to play tha mari and put your best foot forwarii But. these features of this marvel- lous book are far from being the 5- sence of the Bible. If this were all that the Bible contained, it could never have won the place it has in' the affection and reverence of men and women. It has something mli than that to give us. The Bible owes its uniqueness to the fact that I gives God to us in Jesus Christ, Hia son. It is the loving and merciful message of the Eternal Father to you and me, His children. A.nd'i¢ is not a mere message or record-i ts ra power that leads us Gros, and when we are led Cross we come as near to men may come in this mo '§§§ss iiiiie- when the world needed such a Book as this it is today when so man! seem to have lost their balance and their bearings. Only when the Christ of the Bible is supreme in the worlds hearts can we have peace and concord. and a prosperity and happiness that go down to bed»- rock. "0 may these heavenly DB8” ha My ever dear delight: and still new beauties may I seq _ And still increasing light. Divine Instructor. gracious Lord, Be Thou for ever near: Teach me to love Thy sacred word, And view my Saviour there." TEARS ACROSS (Continued from Page I3 :_l*;-_~_>;:_.;;___"*7.l ---‘ii Four Dio To these were added fom' de&il in the general snow swan which swept over the country from Okla- ’ homa and the Nebraska plains to the Atlantic sesboard, Au-mail operations by the UW wer, halted several hours and commercial plane schedules over;;a wide territory were dlsrul>*»¢d~ -_U7 service out of Newark, N, J, flyml field was si0l>D¢d-lf'\0l\1CUDK WIN army mail planes-by a four-1hCh _mnvv hiankei. Family WlP°d 0" such of the tornado victims- six of thi-m members of one fam- il_v-iost their IMS Wholl 8 I-WIIWF imifv-d through a rural soot-10|! 10 miles from Meridian, Mba. A wo- man vms killed at Cairn, ALI1 ‘mer randrur ‘llc rnnrsliucklc huts g _ _ _ of 11. few ii.sin~i'rnnn with their ncis sprcad out upon tilt* rocks that vv.":'i‘ formerly ilu- ciivs iouirdnilons. And your thought, flirs bam: in the i.wi‘niy-slxili rhzipicr of Ezekiel and these \\'ords-v"/\11cl they .shall dcs- tro ihc walls of 'l`vl'i‘_ and break like the top of 11 rock. lt shall bc Museum and wander into the Assyr the relies of the great city of Nin evah, where once nearly all th Those people who are examini those relim are not so much :YB iii "I will Rt Chl! ll sei* *'¥ Cf Whltlhlivrsaidlabiltl Y _ down her town-s, l will also scrape her dust from mr, and mnkn hrr a plnro for the spreading of ni-is in the midst of the son, for I have spoken il, saith thc Lord Gnd, and it shall br-come a spoil to the na- tions." lf you visit 7.1.- british ian rooms there, particularly in the tourist season. you will sea- crowds of people representing nearly every country of the world locking into the vast glass cases which contain power and wealth nf the world lay. fl! looking but are gazing, gazing speilbound at ` what is left of that great city. And, aa you watch them. your thoughts fiyba&tothewordsoftheprop- ln, who said thoiaaanih of for the nations* Do at more an some three prophecies made In the oidiest.amentrogardingJesusChrist. which were literally fulfilled hun- lodaof years after theywuat; dmalanywqkd when high winds demolished her _home Another person was killed rand several injured when a storm. ‘destroyed many homes at Ashland. |Aln. Bedding and supplies for the norm viciuna them was requested in ii rush message to american legion headquarters at Birming- ham, Ala. Five Inch Snow Fall The snow powdered Wsahingiom D. C.. with n five-inch cover, and invaded Dixie. sweeping into Vir- ginia and along the North Oaro- lina coast and burying many com- munities under a record fall blonk- ed highways. It was two feet deep sorne places on the eastom liry- land shim-_ Motor traffio was ai almost a walk in northern states. Om uhed to the cold was man mining sinus who was foamd f\'@n near Bel‘Dl\¢- N. J. tattered clothing was fo from expanse in Chioap. -5535? Ililllrl Nino iililt -h?w§ t"§@£ i.hi|hrln|h0IlQ\0YC' ’ I1 N' 1 a _...__ ____~.. l 1 1 I 1 I J o _ _-nl 1 i 1 '-1 . '1.