ale ge the cal ph an- ry. cal 11 er, ax, OV- ®2 3 & » 1a! oe FR oz SS Thursday, January 5, 1939. | SEIBERLING POINTS THE WAY TO ECONOMY LARGER DIAMETER G) MORE WEIGHT 4 or Te Sadly be overlooked when BRO. ADE FLATIER | | Seiberling goes out of its 5 Show tise wets he road to thrift om new Stand - seo a y ard Serv. We have facts and figures to prove that a greater cross-section, weighs more, has a deeper tread thickness, has greater cord tensile strength and a rugged center fraction tread design for maximum safety. Look at all the features of this tire A point to economical and trouble- free service . . . and then look at the pricel ' Fully Guaranteed IN WRITING Whea you Bop tires doit, Depend wibel Yromisn. » piped a en guarantee pro- Br ment, Sond nd, Servic tee wry y (tr rmererere perl efroerdoy 10 DAY SPECIAL Bring your car to our store, tell us what you think your old tires are worth and if your proposition is reasonable we will allow you the amount you ask as a down payment on a set of Seiberlings, Amer- ica’s finest tire. This offer good for 10 THE UNION PRESS-COURIER. ple have often assumed toward the Bethlehem child in the cradle, There | are many people who adore Christ grown to maturity as a man. Religious- | ly, they are content to keep the Christ- | mas child in swaddling clothes all of their lives—and all His life. If it were only that a child were | born there would be no Christmas in 1938, or in any other year. The great thing about the occasion that Christ- mas celebrated is that the child who was born in the stable lived a normal life, and as Luke tells us, he ‘increased in wisdom and stature and in favor with God and man.’ He grew up and became an adult. It was as an adult that he lived the life which altered history and which should be for the encouragement of us all. Therefore, fundamental to any Christmas celebra- tion is the fact that the child became the man whose life story is in our Gospels. His influence ana our greatest im- petus to the Christian faith spring directly from his adult life. And while at Christmas we may grow kindly as we gather about the cradle, the help- less spirit of infancy was not the source of Jesus’ influence. The great leader, the valiant crusader, the bearer of burdens, the giver of His life—all of these are of the man. So while at Christmas we remember the beginning of the life, let us not forget to celebrate the greater thing which is the contin- uation and the well wrought conclusion of that life. The Christmas Child does not even speak our language; he does not.dis- turb the deep springs of our motives. But when he becomes a man he says: ‘Follow mé¢. ‘Blessed are ihe pure in heart.’ ‘Go and sin no more.’ ‘Fatner, forgive inem.’ These are life-changing words. They are the keen insights of complete ma- turity. Many would tnat they might never hear them, coming as they do from the man. Rather they would see only the vague, winsome smile of the child, a lovely child, whose inarticu- late sounds tug at every human heart. As a man, walking about in our busy marts of commerce, frequenting the legislative assemblies and committee rooms where national policies and in- ternational relations are decided, he is — re ——