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The Exeter Times-Advocate, 1933-06-15, Page 3THE EXETER TIMES-ADVOCATE THURSDAY, JUNE 15, 1033 BUSINESS SOLD Mrs. Annie Rouatt, of Bayfield*, who has for over thirty years con­ ducted a hardware business has dis­ posed of the stock selling to Chas. Scotchmen of Stanley Township. —4-----------—— S. S. NO. 11, BLACKBUSH The following is the report for S. S'. No. 11, Blackbush for the month of May. Pupils, whose names are marked with an asterik were absent for one or more examinations. iSr. IV—Bruce Gardner, 6 8. Jr. IV—MeTle Dietrich 69. iSr. Ill—Roy Mjorenz, 61; Rita Dietrich, 60; Louis Dietrich, 48. Jr. Ill—LorneDevine, 58; Henry Ziler, '5>5; Eileen Disjardine 54; Ray Fischer 46; Elva Adams 32*; Earl Gardner, absent. Sr. II—Earl Dietrich 64; Aldene Preeter 58; Sylvia Vincent, i56; Evelyn French 513; Viola Vincent 52 Tresia Zil^r 49. Jr. II—Leonard Dietri'ch 74; Harold Fischer 72; Wilmer Disjar­ dine 56; Chester Disjardine 48*. I—Lillian Fischer, 93; Joyce En- geland 89; Verna Vincent 86; Hu­ bert Dietrich 61; Helpn Ziler 52; Peter Ziler 51; Ruby Disjardine 40. Pr. —M artina Dietrich, Mona Tetreau. f No. on roll 30; average attendance 27. L. M. Snell, Teacher. USBORNE COUNCIL The Municipal Council of the Township of Usborne met at Elim- ville on June 3rd in its regular monthly meeting with all the mem­ bers of Council present. The minutes of the last regular meeting together with those of the special meeting of May 23rd were read and approved on motion of Moir-Westcott. The Court of Revision on the 193|3 Assessment Roll was held at the ap­ pointed hour, each member taking the necessary declaration. The fol­ lowing appeals were dealt with viz: George Godbolt, Si Lot 4, Con. 1 as being too high, no change; Can­ adian Canners, Lot 7, S.E.B. busi­ ness tax, in-operative, granted. War­ ren Brock, Lot 10, con. 10, as be­ ing too high, no change. Thames Road Telephone System as being non-assessa'ble. Granted. S.J, Lot S’1 Con 6, assessed to Wilson Hawkins, owner, instead of Olive Hunter, Ex­ ecutor. Lot 8, Con. 13, assessed to Joe & Eliza Stephens instead of Wm. Stephens with Andrew and Pearl Stephens as joint owners. Lot 7, Con. 11, assessed to Wellington Batten instead of Henry Pfaff. Pt. Lot 11, Con. 8, assessed to Freeman Horne instead of Wellington Batten. Pt. Lot 8, S.E.B. assessed to Revil and Gladys Pearson instead of Ar­ chie McCurdy with Annie Pearson added on same list. Lot f3>, Con. 1, assessed to Harvey Godbolt instead of Michael Fletcher. ISJ Lot 15, and N.i 14, 'Con. 9, assessed to Stanley Coward instead of Edward Coward. Lot 3'5, Con. 2, assessed to Walter Madge, owner, instead of John and Jean Madge, tenants. Lot 15, Con. 7, assessed to Chas, Johns instead Clarise Snell. Pt. Let 19, N. T. R. assessed to Edward Coward with dog addgd. pt. Lot 10, Con, 7, as­ sessed to Wilbur Batten instead of Sam Brock. Wi Lot 6, N.T.R. as­ sessed to Alwyn Dayman instead of Joe Kernick. Lot 13, Con. 1 assess- to John Spachek instead of Peter Strobe with dog added, The name of Edna Anderson added on Lot 2. Con. 7. The name of Thomas and Bella Kyle added on Lot 3'5, Con, 2. Names removed, Jiohn and Jean Madge, John Routley. Clyde Hey­ wood to be assessed for bitch. The dogs of ihe following were removed Wm. Morley, Sam. Brock, Ben Will­ iams, John Kellett, John Madge and George Coward. This was passed^-on motion of Shier-Passmore. Court Closed. Treasurer’s report: Taxes transferred to Twp account $1050.00; Penalties, -29.29; High­ way Grant on Township expenditure $21375.43. The followng bills were paid on miotion of Shier-Westcott viz: Fred ElleTington, 15 sheep and 7 lambs killed by dogs and a number of others injured, $164.; Howard Hun­ ter, 1 registered ewe killed by dogs $15.00; George Godbolt, 1 farm bridge, Fletcher Drain $20.0'0 ac­ crued interest thereon $11.21; Hr. Dunlop, M.O.H., expenses Board of Health for 1932, $113,2.00; M. O.H.. retainng fee, $10.00; Board of Health meeting $3.00'; James Ball- antyne, Bd. of Health meeting $3,00 Joshua Johns, Bd. of Health meeting $3.00; John Kellett, Bd. of Health meeting, $3.00; Henry Strang, sec’y Bd. of Health meeting, $3.00; MiJ- ton Brock, treas. Zion Cemetery, grant, $50.00; H. H. Brown, salary as assessor, $75.00, postage, 34c.; H. H. Brown, equalization of S. S. 12, Union Whalen, $5.00; Luther Rowcliffe, Ditching, $1.50; Freeman Home, trucking tile, $1.5'0; Henry Ford, superintendance, $10.40. Car. Council adjourned to meet on Fri­ day, June 30th at 1 p.m. (Signed) Henry Strang, Clerk. A special meeting of the Munici­ pal Council of the Township of Us­ borne was held at Elimville on May 2l3ird to consider gravel tenders. All the members of Council were pres­ ent. The following tenders for crushing and trucking gravel were received and considered viz: J. M. Young, R.R. 1 Science Hill, crushing, 19c. per cubic yard, truck­ ing, 8c. per yd. per mile. McEwin & Babb, R.R. 3, Stratford, crushing, 20c. per cubic yard, truck­ ing 9c. per' yard per mile. 'Samuel Gascho, Wellesley, Ont. crushing, 24c. per cubic yard, truck­ ing, 1st mile TOc. each additional mile 7c. yer yd. mile. W. J. Holman: crushing 24c. per cubic yard, trucking 8c. yer yd for 4 miles, 7c. over 4 miles. Wilbur Mahaffy: crushing 30c. per cubic yard. ' Stamford Watson: Trucking 1st mile 10c., 8c. for each additional mile per yard mile. Percy Parsons: 1st mile 12c., 2nd 21c., 3rd 30c., 4th 39c., 5th 48c.. 6th 57c. per yard mile. Shier-Passmore: 1. That the ten­ der of J. M. Young be accepted. 2. That he furnish the necessary secur­ ity. 3. That he begin the contract not later than June l'Oth. 4. That the work continue without un­ necessary delays until completed. Carried. The Council adjourned to meet in regular meeting on Saturday, June 3rd at i o’clock. Henry Strang, Clerk. reason to think that the cross was the end of the earthly career of Je­ sus and that there was nothing left to do but to show honor of his dead body. Though Jesus had spokeh of rising in three days, his followers had not grasped his meaning or caught his faith. All the resurrec­ tion stories have as their background the mood of sorrow, d&feat and de­ spair. The Stone Rqjled Away, 3. 4. What was it that changed the fol­ lowers of Jesus from the mood of despaiT to triumphant faith? It Was a series of happenings which con­ vinced them that Jesus still lived These women at sunrise, coming to anoint a dead body in a tomb wor­ ried about how they should get the great stone rolled away. That was their first lesson in the resurrection faith. In spite of themselves they began to be convince® that some­ thing unexpected had happened and the wonder grew from day to day In time they came to understand that no grave was strong enough to imprison the spirit of Jesus. He could not be holden of death. He brought life and immortality to light. Because he lives, we shall live also. For Christians the fear of death has been rolled away like the stone at the entrance to Joseph’s tomb. He is Risen, 5. 6. The accounts of the resurrection in the Gospels vary in details but they all bear witness to the central fact that Christ arose from the dead and had further fellowship with his followers. Nor is this only an­ cient history: it is abiding witness of the Christian Church. "There are many miracles in li>e that are not often described as such. I know'of no greater miracle than this; that the Jesus who lived, and loved and laugher and toiled and suffered, and died, and rose, and ascended, is nearer to any one pt us than any form of words can describe. We sometimes say that He is near us, and we think of a form bending ov­ er us, a hand upon our shoulder, a voice that charms our ear, a face that searches our hearts. But His nearness is even more intimate than that, and when we say that He can dwell on our hearts, even then the experience is greater, more intimate than our poor words can ever de­ scribe. Is there any miracle in the world greater than this, that at this moment He is nearer to us than to Mary in the garden, that He calls our name, needs our love, pieads for our discipleship, longs for our loyalty? If that really once dawned upon us we should not be able to do other than say what Mary said, in the same spirit of utter loyalty, obed­ ience and adoration, ‘Oh, my great Master.’ ” Friends Still, 7. 8. c Mark’s Gospel is the oldest of the four and Mark owed some of his in­ formation to Peter. In view of this fact, verse seven has added signifi­ cance. “But" go your way, tell his disciples and Peter that he goeth before you into Galilee:’ there shall ye see him, as he said unto you.” "And Peter.” Only in Mark is this recorded, showing that Peter re­ membered gratefully this special message from the risen Christ. The Master’s interest in his disciples had not lessened nor had his love for them changed. They had deserted him and played no hero’& part, but he would not desert them. In Gali­ lee, the scene of so many of their wanderings and conversations, he would restore them. He is still do­ ing this for his followers when they are discouraged. "Faith has yet its Olivet, and Love its Galilee.” We may now see Christ and the power of his resurrection. W® may be risen with Christ and have our hearts set on things above. Unwilling to Believe, 9-11 Tne disciples were even more re­ luctant to believe than the women had been. They had no hope of Christ’s resurrection from the dead. They had gone away to mourn and weep and when Mary Magdalene came telling them that Jesus was alive and that she tad seen him they would not believe. Yet shortly after and for the remainder of their lives the disciples lived in the power of Christ’s resurrection. What changed them? It was their own in­ dividual experience of the living Christ. They emerged from the at­ mosphere of scepticism to glorious fearless faith. We are prone to show a similiaf doubt towards the yearning for life hereafter. In youth we are apt to think that the spirit ceases with the breath. Longer reflection upon the meoning of life, however, strength­ ens our hope of immortality. The remarkable thing is not that me may live on hereafter, but that we ever began to live here at all. Growth from a cell to an adult body is quite as surprising a fact as the taking on of a spiritual body when we are fin­ ished with this present house of clay. Life has a new meaning when we believe that death does not end life. "Why should love allow the end of what it loves? Why should a father rear children till their love for him has bloomed into full sweet­ ness, and dig graves into which he thrusts them while their hearts aTe springing to his and his name trembling up;on their lips? If death ends, life, what is this world but an ever-yawning-grave in which the loving God buries his children with hopeless sorrow, mocking at once their love and hope and every at­ tribute of his own nature? Divine as well as human love has but one symbol in language*—forever!” Questions for Discussion 2. Have women or men shown greater devotion to Christ? 2. Do Christians live as though Christ’s resurreciton were true? 3. What was the significance of the words “and Peter?” 4. "We are not human bodies.” Disucss this. 5. ‘Sir Wilfred Grenfell said: "Life of a personality arter death of the body is not only scientifically conceivable now, but probable.” why 6. How does Christ live in his followers to-day? THIS NEW TIRE WILL SAVE LIVES Sunday School Lesson JESUS RISES FROM THE DEAD (INTERNATIONAL UNIFORM SUN­ DAY SCHOOL LESSON, JUNE 18) ■GOLDEN TEXT:"He is risen.”— Mark 16:6. Depression Prices!! on all kinds of lumber . and shingles. Call and see for your­ self or phone 12 Matched White Pine $35.00 per M. A. J. CLATWORTHY Phone 12 K GRANTON* ONTARIO LESSON PASSAGE: Mark 16: 1-11. ’Tis the divinity that stirs within us ’Tis heaven itself tliat points out a hereafter Arid intimates eternity to man. —Addison. First at the Tomb, 1. 2. The women were last at the cross and earliest at the tomb. Very early in the morning the first day of the wetk they sought out the tomb of Jdseph of Aflmathea to anoint the body of Jesus. thdy had no resur- rectidn hope in their hearts. Their mood was that of sorrow, not of ex­ pectation, 'The news of the resurrec­ tion came to them as a great Sur­ prise. Tfae wish was not the father to the thought, They had every MAKES "SAFEST TIRE EVER BUILT 3 TIMES SAFER FROM BLOW-OUTS REMARKABLE NEW INVENTION NO EXTRA COST TO PUBLIC Co^rOl JOHN, WHAT IF WE •HROta THIS is _ probably the most vital single announcement ever made about a tire. It’s the story of a life-saving invention.—An invention that will save hundreds of lives . . . maybe your life ... and prevent hundreds of those accidents that maim and cripple people. How people are killed For years auto speeds have been increasing. Big car or little— today they’re built for speed. And when the speedometer reads 40, 50 and 60—mile after mile ... the heat inside the tire carcass becomes terrific. Rubber and fabric begin to separate. A blister starts «.. inside the tire, where you can’t see it... and grows. Like an insidious tumor, it gets bigger and bigger. .. Until BANG! A blow­ out! The rim hits the road . . . And a terrible drag sets in . . . Like some unseen monster pulling your car off the road. So somebody simply HAD to build a safer tire. One that would stand the terrific strain of modern high-speed motors. How it prevents blow-outs To protect you from blow-outs, every new Goodrich Safety Silver- town Tire has the amazing new Life-Saver Golden Ply. This new invention resists terrific heat— fabric and rubber don’t separate. Thus, blisters don’t form inside the tire. Blow-outs are prevented by overcoming the very cause of blow-outs before they start. Three times Safer at High Speeds At gruelling speeds on the world’s fastest track, the new Goodrich Safety Silvertown Tire with the Life-Saver Golden Ply lasted three times as long as first quality tires that did not have this feature; Proved itself three times safer from blow-outs. Other tires blew out at one-third the distance the New Silvertowns were run. The new Silvertowns NEVER blew . . . Rubber got so hot it fairly smoked . . . wore right down to the fabric. But the Golden Ply refused to give. Safest anti-skid tread The tread, too, is safer from skidding. Scientific tests with leading makes of tires prove that Goodrich Safety Silvertowns have the most skid-resisting tread on the road. Even on wet, slippery pavements, the squeegee drying action of this famous tire gives your car extra road grip and reduces danger of skidding to the minimum. Put this Silvertown Tire on your car. It costs you not one cent more than any other standard tire. Drive io where you see the "Mountie”—the brightly colored sign which identifies the Goodrich dealer. It tells you where Good­ rich Tires are sold—the safest tires ever built. MADE IN CANADA °llTs /.A X. . NxW] ''' * & '' bi o o D R I C H Look for the Mountie This sign tells you we sell Goodrich Safety Silvcrtown with Life-Saver Golden Ply. FREE This handsome emblem with red crystal reflec­ tor to protect you "if your tail light goes out. Come in and get yours, and become a member of the Silvertown Safety League. WITH XIFE-SAVJER GOLDEU PLT Huron Garage, Exeter C. J. Stewart, Prop. Phone 155w and 155j