Lords JanuafyM. 1932 Hats Sharp Paint In His Heart Nerves In Bad Condition Mr. Fred J. Chaw Thomson Station, NS My heart would beat so fast I would hava to Vte?.r.hen wo-rk cLoPPiD " the wood! V t, . j "S ",'.; 1Q my tieart when I would lie "wr ' . mjt; nerves wero'algo fifs m$bad MhVifrSnn Price 50c a fpx afflteaSS bearier than I havn Kn . ... r .1 ill drei l"rl ttoru, or nalUd direct on r.Mlpt of prio. b Th. T Uilimn Ltd. Toronto. Unl. Week-End Candy Special Assorted Chocolates Chocolate Covered Cherries Chocolate Covered Fruits in Cream In 1-Pound Boxes, 50c Talio a Iiox Home tomes IM. TTite Pioneer Druggists THE REXALL STORE Dlinnne 81 nnii f9. Thirrl Avn nrwl tfiili.r. Cf , l VII VJ ' w V v UIIU A. 14 1 lull fcjl i e : .;K.ii.,iBM:.0Mi.ii?:i:iii!!i-js!Kiwm.a:H: DEMERS Bargain Sale Dresses $5.95 to $15.00 Coats, up from $W,95 Hosiery, Chiffon (WcIIdrcst) $1.50 Hosiery, Service (Wclldrest) $1.25 Everything to Clear youB $1.00 5 B i i 1 1 a.MiaiBiiiMiBiaiEianiiBmiEiiiiiaiaifliii H. S. OLSEN S n norKAX expert ATCIIMAKEK ,ipi)i( ntlccship at the Royal Danish Watchmaker i Copenhagen, then 12 years abroad working in the big cities of Europe. W Mail Orders Promptly Attended to. Prim Reasonable. TERRACE, HR1TISH COLUMMA UNION STEAMSUH'S LIMITED ' trainers leaf rrlnce Uiipm tot Vanotitr: u.rT.a. r.vi:uv tiesiav. im p.m. m i-an Falls, arriving Vancouver. Thursday p.m. T t AKDI. Y EVr.KY I'RIIIAY MllM(illT A-ming Vancouver Bundaj midniiht approx j aaii-nga to Port Slmpnou. Alice Arm. Anjrox. Stewart and Nm Rlvir DolnU. Sunday. 8 p.m f information regarding all tailings and tlckeU at - I'm NCI' Hl'PF.ItT AORM'Y: ree und .mne. I'rfiie WW Wheal you drink. BOVE1L the Strength and Goodness o Prime Beef Glasses fitted by registered optometrist at Ilcilbroner's store. IiaMYftar, dance. Metr9pole Hall 9 P.nWpjlgm. Gents. 50c. Ladt s 25c. Evejrjrbody welcome. Union steamer Cardena, Capt. James Flndlay, arrived In port at 7 o'clock last evening from the south and sailed at 12 midnight on her return to Vancouver and way points. Alberta Sootless Egg, $11.00; Bulkley Valley, Lump, $12.50. Nanaimo-Wellington Lump, $12.-50. Phone 116 or 117 Albert & McCaffery. BABY'S COL aTa 13 ; Mr. and Mrs. Head of the Digb-, Island wireless station were ovr- nlght visitors in town. Chailes E. Barnwell of the Dominion Fisheries office staff heic sailed last night on the Cardena for a vacation trip to Vancouver. Buy Bulkley better Coal Valley Coal The Mitt Jean Robertson, who lias been spending a holiday at Prince JJ George visiting with her parent. Judge and Mrs. 11 A. Robertson. returned to the city from the Inferior on this morning's train. O. P. Tinker, who Is receiving treatment In the Prince Rupert General Hospital for a broken leg continues to make satisfactory progress toward recovery although it will probably be a few weeks bo-fore he is able to be about again Mr. and Mrs. Malcolm Canipbeil will sail on the Princess Mary tomorrow afternoon for Vancouver vhrre it Is their Intention to tak up future residence. They have lived hers for several years. Mr. Campbell having been on various ores tons identified with the staffs or 'oca! grocery stores. Walter A. Rush and E. J I laugh ton. officials of the Dominion department of radlotelegraphy front Ottawa and Victoorta respectively, are visitors in the city on official business. They arrived on the Cardena last night from the south antt will rttufln W Vancouver on th Catala next Tuesday afternoon. ANNOUNCEMENT Jasper Wildfire Coal is now the hottest in the domestic field. Government analysis shows it to be the hlthest in B.T.V.'s and less ash. it i starts quick and lasts longer. Fur-ithermore. for your benefit don't j think for one minute because our I coal is lower in price that we are glvrru you a cheaper grade as other coal dealers may state to you. Yijur next order "Jasper Wild- flat t MM aa 1tlfYlt VfltI .IIT Qflv fftr I II V VI ' w ws cash prices and save your dollars. (tf H)tlr Transfer Phone 580 ! Announcements .L Eagles' Social Dance Wednesday irabruanriil dancing 8:30 to 1:30.1 jOentlemen SOc. Ladles, refresh-Iments. Everybody welcome. C.N.R. annual dance will b1 held in Moose Hall Friday, Ftbru-ary 5. 1932. Moose Valentine Dance, Feb. 12. Moose Badminton Dance Feb. Id Catholic Women's League Sprlnd jtolMprll It v ' "J TITS DAILY news PAGE THREE LOCAL NEWS ITEMS Bert's Taxi, Phone 678. "Service" is our motto. Give us a call. tf R W. Sinclair of Inverness ran-nerjWrrivcd In the city yesterday afternoon for a brief business visit to town. Wonderful Ice at Salt Lakes-Salvage Princess leaves at 2, 4 and 7 p.m. Sunday. Lots of coffee. PACIFIC SALVAGE CO. Howard R. Hill 61 the CN.lt. freight shed staff here returned to the city on this morning's .rain from Saskatoon wnere he has been attending a convention of the Ca nadian Brotherhood of .Railway Employees. Every ton of Bulkley Vallej purchased gives more employment in your own locality. R B. Greggor, who is to succeed E E. Gregg, as assistant dlstric forester here, arrived In the cttj on this morning's train from Williams Lake where he has been stationed as assistant district forester. He was accompanied by Mrs. Greggor and small child. Mr. and Mrs. Gregg will leave on Monday's train for Prince George where Mr Gregg will take over his new duties as district forester. BIG SALE OFF WELL Crowds Attend B. C. Clothiers Fire Sale Which is Still Coin; Strong The Big Fire Sale of the B. C. Clothiers which oponed on Friday morning has been the shopping centre of the city yesterday aiid today. Crowds of eager buyers have been flocking In and gettlv.? some of the bargains that have been offered. There are plenty of bargains let for the stock Is a large one. Herr are a few prices we quote to show the general trend r Heavy wool ribbed Underwea $150 regular price now 75c; Stan-field's Red Label underwear $1.25 a garment; Men's cashmere combination 95c.; Viking all-wool combinations regular $5.50 at $2-75; 290 men's felt hats, regular up to $5.00 going now at $130. Hun dreds of suite and overcoats, latent styles at $10. $12 up to $15.00. B. C. CLOTHIERS. Third Ave. West BABY'S OWN SOAP It's Best forYoUoBobi too Hotel Arrivals New Royal Hotel THE HOTEL WORTH WHILE Hot ti Cold water: Steam Heat 75c. PER DAY AND UP J. Zarelll Trlrphotir 1X1 Prince Rupert DRY DOCK AND SHIPYARD Operating three Dry Docks Total capacity 20,000 tons Shipbuilders and Ship Repairers fur Steel and Wood Vessels Sawmill and MiningAlachlnery Repaired and Overhauled Iron and Brass Casting Electric and Acetylene Welding 50-ton Derrick for Heavy Lifts jQuality has God Is Love no substitute A SATURDAY SERMON By Rev. Canon W. F. Rushbrook, St. Peter's Anglican Church "I'-O H This Pregnant Sentence is Not Theological or Dogmatic Utterance This is hte most pregnant sentence ever penned. It is not a theological or dogmatic ecclesiastical utterance. It is the expression of a personal experience. John did not invent the phrase lie realized it. It is, moreover, possibly the first religious truth which we ever learned and to our child mind quite comprehensible. We knew nothing in those days of what is termed su- Dernatural rellzlon. This text wp 3 order of things," or with Joh'. supremely natural. It was human. Didn't everyone love- us and didn't we lovt everybody, because they first loved us? Just as naturally we loved God, for he too first loved us. John was an old man when he wrote these words but he still had the child's heart of faith, so wa. able to keep aU the beauty and sweetness of life. "little children he called his Christian friends. LltUe children love one another Except ye be as UtUe children ye cannot enter Into the Kingdom of God." This Is not puerile teaching. Though simple It enshrines. In the opinions of the world's great?:; thinkers of today, the only power that Is capable of saving the social and political fabric of the won.l 'rom utter destruction. Love as have loved you even so love ye one another. Those of you who have read the gospel of John, and especially his first Epistle, will havf noted that the Gospel Is written In the third person, as an onlooK- ;r. The author many times implies himself, as In the first chapter! John 1.40. At :other times he re- j fers to himself as "the disciple whom Jesus loved'' the disciple1 who "leaned on his breast at sup- per." But when we turn to tre Fpt.nle we find It written in the irit person and he definitely! ' ,.t that he had not only "seen with his eyes and looked upon,": b.n his hands had handled the j Word of life." And he also added; hat many of the old men then) lving had "known (Hun) from; the beginning." j It was this personal contact with Je.sus that led to the recognition of him as God. and the experience i of Jesus' love for IHm and His reciprocating love for Jesus he Inter prets as God is Love because Jesus was Love. "God is Love." Jesus never actually used the term, though t ils great truth colored all his teach ings, and John had not been able. to express it had he not knovr ind experienced it in Jesus. To experience this truth vt must know Jesus, the manifestation of God. Our noblest worship of God Is expressed in aets of love o man. This is what differentiates the Christian conception of Goc! from all others. The truth that "God Is" is .as old as the history .f man It is Innate expressed in many forms, fetish and otherwise )y primitive people, or the conclusion of pure reason, as Plato a Sir Arthur Kteth page 151 Living Philosophies) or Sir James Jeaiu i page 118 Idem), and I have glear . cd this sentence from such .v writer as the atheist, Irwin Ed- nan: "1 believe also, though more' superstitlously, and not on suchj good evidence he has been speak-j Ing of the things one can hoar,! see, touch and smell) that thre lj a kind of order of things, whlc'il lor short may be called Mechai.- i Ism." It had been shorter to havoj said "God." The same writer h.vj this to say also "I do not believe j life in general or the world In gen -1 eral has any meaning." I You may call God, with the He- brews, " am. "You may with' Plato say God." you may wltn leans say "the laps of the gods" or with Keith a "Oreat unlvena; Mlnri " nr ujltli Rrlmnii "lrlnrt if I "God Is Love." or with Jesus "O Father." Jesus and John at least gave us a concrete truth. God Is not a visible society known as a cnurcn. usually me more a church teaches that It and it alone is of God, the more loveless, cruel and Christles8 it becomes in its re ligious and social pronouncements That the voice of the church is. alas too seldom, the voice of God. is a fact evident in history, for Ood is Love. In his "Revolt of Modern Youth" Judge Ben Lindsay says: "No man can escape God. not even in what he may stupidly believe to be a Godless world." And again "The Revolt of Youth" against this bludgeoning bespeaks on the part of our race, a naUve ability to find it's soul and to live In harmony with God. and that this ineffable urge will in time be victorious for God is Love.' ! 1(1 .? TCfl, yresvm tfie gardens1 Young People's Dance Enjoyed One Hundred Persons in Atten dance at Afafir In Metropole Hail Last Evening A very successful young people's dance was held last night in the Metropole Hall by the Paramount Orchestra of which Gunnar Clav-ring is the conductor. There were over 100 persons in attendance and all had a very happy time. At midnight refreshments were served by the ladles. J. Jeans was master of ceremonies and Ole Welle presided at the door. Robert Young of the Bank of Canada staff will sail on the Princess Mary tomorrow afternoon fur a holiday visit to Vancouver. laKTVBHnaM For over half a cenrurr Dr Chaie's Kidncr and Liver Pills have proven luccetiful in promptly relieving torpid. atu gnh action ot lha Ltver. Kidneys and Bowels and the legion of ills that ariits therefrom. CHURCH NOTICES FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Minister, Kev. W. D. Grant Hoilingworth. B.A. Organist, John E. Davey 11 A.M., Sermon Subject: "Christian Preparedness" 12:15, Sunday School 7:30 P.M., Sermon Subject, "THE PRODIGAL" Based on a poem by Rudyard Kipling Music: Hymn-Anthem: "In the Land of Strangers" (Bonar) Soloist: A. Clapper ton All visitors welcome FIRST UNITED CHURCH Pastor, Rev. A. Wilson. B. Morning Worship at 11 o'clock. Song by Junior Choir Subject, "THE SEVENTH COMMANDMENT Sunday School at 12:15 Evening at 7:30 SONO SERVICE Solo "Come Unto Me," (Handel) Dr. R. O. Large Anthem. "Abide With Me" Subject "THOU SUALT NOT KILL' Reference to forthcoming Disarmament Conference ST. ANDREW'S CATHEDRAL (Church of Englandl Very Rev. J. K. Gibson, Dean DAY OF PRAYER FOR DISARMAMENT CONIERKNCI! 8 A M., Holy Communion 11 AM., Morning Prayer and Sermon 12:30, Sunday School '. 7:30 P.M- Evening Prayer and Sermon, ; Men's Banquet In Cathcdrtl 1111 on Wednesday njext at ;f$t& CHRISTIAN SCIENCE (Christian Science Society, 245 Second Avenue West) This Society is a branch of the Mother Church, the First Church of Chrtst, Scientist. In Boston. Mass. Sunday morning service at 11 o'clock. Subject. "CHRIST JE8U8 " Sunday School at 12:15. Testimonial meeting Wednesday at 8 p.m. Reading Room. 245 Second Avenue, open on Mondays and Thursdays from 3 to 5.