Loading...
The Exeter Times-Advocate, 1932-08-04, Page 3THE EXETER TIMES-ADVOCATE THURSDAY, AUGUST Rto 1B2U Automobile license plates for seat year will be black figures oh ,a yel­ low background. This colour scheme will be ifamfliar to Ontario tobtor* ists as it was last used In 1930. The present mdthpd of numbering be continued. will 4, PLACE BUOY OVER SPOT WERE DREDGE SANK. The Government patrol boat Mur­ ray Stewart, is^in port m Goderich. Her crew is engaged in placing a gas •buoy at the scene of the. sinking the Government dredge op June last, off Bayfield, 13 miles south Goderich, of 23 of r . • ’ BROKEN BONE IN WOT Mrs, Oswald Ginn, of Goderich, suffered a'painful a'ccident when she slipped on the floor at the rec­ tory and sustained a break in the bone of her foot at the ankle. Mrs. Ginn who had been assist-* ing at the tea in the Ravish Hall, had gone to the rectory to telephone when the accident occurred. Medical aid was sutomone-d and she was moved to her home. re- Mount Sinai and Sinai stood for the law, the righteousness, the holiness of God. It was a dread place -Cor sinners' to approach—-and old men were sinners. When Israel reached the wilderness at Sinai in her jour­ neying out of Egypt toward the promised land Rod and Moses com­ manded the people to make very special preparation for listening to His words. The people must he ceremonially cleansed and sanctified they must "go pot up into the Mount, or touch the border of it: whatsoever * toucheth . the Mount shall be surely put to'vdeath,” For the Mount stood for the presence of God, and nq sinner can come into the presence of God and live. Sin and righteousness have nothing in common; there can be no fellowship between them. Let us keep this in mind in these days when it is popu- see but t el­ and 4- HUMIDITY OF OTTAWA AFFECTS DELEGATES “Taint the he^t—it’s the humid­ ity.” And overseas delegates to the Imperial Economic conference find summertime with “Our Lady of the Snows” something different from what they had^expacted, The vagar­ ies of Ottawa’s,- i^iimate keep the* delegates guessing—ana yawning. “I never felt so sleepy in all my life,” droned one prominent member of au overseas group “What is it?” “The heat?” - “It isn’t warm today.” “The humidity?” “Uhuli,” yawned the trans-Atlan­ tic conferee. “I never used” to feel like sleeping in the middle of . the day; but now i just want to go 'and lie down. I’ve spoken to others from the United Kingdom and Ire­ land, and the-y feel the same.” lar to have no convictions, to nothing in blacks aim whites, only in foggy greys. There is no eration for blurred tnmking compromised living in the Bible. After reminding Israel. “J am the Lord, thy God, which have brought thee out of the land of of tjie house of bondage, four simple commands Israel and Himself: > 1. Gods 2. thee it. A name of the Lord thy God in vain.” Day, Egypt, out ' God gives concerning , and Himself; y “Thou shaft Wave before Me.” “Thou shalt not * make any graven image, no other unto ar worship OK VCFAQO AfSfn ' I PROHIBITION dn prince T s EDWARD ISLAND Or Wednesduy evepiug a very I The following article whs given to closely contested an4 interesttos Main street Sunday School recently gume of bowls was played out on and is 'being published by request the Rectory dawn by two rinks, vte:' of a number who were present* The presidents, James Taylor, J. Davis, j article first appeared in the Amer“ Rev. Mr. Martin, Gladmaw skip IB. I jCan Magazine by Wm. S, Dalton, Vilce^presidents, W."D. Clarke, L. H-lthe facts being furnished by R. N. Dickson, w. W. Tamrtn, Hurdon skip ’ Coates, Dominion Statistician. It LL j later appeared to “The Pre-sent Murray Miller and Andy Robin-' Truth” Washington D. C., by Dr, D. son, who some weeks ago bought a J H. Kress, Washington D.C. San. & large hotel in Saskatoon, have dis- Hospital was also published to “The posed of it and Mr. and Mrs. Mur- • Indian Social Reformer ray have returned to Lloydmtoister. j India. A horse owned by Mr, Elston, of Biddulph, became 1 unruly while being driven into town ( on Monday last. The horse refus­ ed to go and turinng’' around upset > all the occupants into the The foUowtogarticle was given in Bombay, our own very in- r” These facts about Richard I little province should be very I foresting to our readers: ' - j The enemies of .prohibition claim ’ that'it is very bad thing, that leads road. For- to dis*‘espect far law, drunkenness, tunately all escaped with very little debauchery your youth, gaugsterdom I and is a hindrance to prosperity.injury, Mrs. Elijah Jory Miss Laura met with ant accident on Huron Street when the bit of the bridle brake and the horse running away threw them b.oth out of the rjg, Miss Jory es- capecT with slight injuries but Mrs, Jory received a severe shaking up. During Thursday night Joseph J. Ca'rruther's driving shed was struck by lightning and totally destroyed, Eexter trimmed Ci'ecliton on Fri­ day night last 21-12. Of coruse it I wasn’t the regular team that p^ay-See the Show Window of the Nations, mingle with the* two million delighted visitors, seize the spirit that grips and thrills, experience the enthusiasm that permeates this gor­ geous 350-acre lakeside park and its scores*of permanent and costly ex­ position edifices. honeymooners favoured ON ITALIAN RAILWAYS The Italian state railways recent­ ly announced an go. per cent honey­ mooners’ reduction in round-trip tickets to Rome. The move was init­ iated by the Government to foster interest in marriages, which been must cates fares week good capital. have declining of late,. Couples present their wedding eertifl- wheri applying for tickets. The -must be purchased within a after marriage, and they for two weeks’ stay in NUMBER I PLEASE! • Oscar of his He says Man in a hurry phoped Klopp recently for a part Massey-Harris Spreader. ‘‘I don’t know the number, but it’s i a cog wheel without cogs, its the 1 Prince Edward island has a pop- Size of an egg If it were squashed daughter, uiation o£ eighty thousand. In 1§79 , f]at, you know it goes down betweenand ( a very unpleas-' i and just behind the two things that stick out like a fork You know it goes up and down when -the load goes back. Yes! I am in a hurry, as I have a man hired to help me. Yes, send it out with Dennie Bedard our bread man. Yes I’ll send money in with Dennie” Would expect to get the right part? got it!—Zurich Herald one of its counties adopted the New Canada Temperance Act and shortly after the other counties did likewise In 1900 a Provincial Prohibition law was enacted and has never been repealed. TTiis means that the pro­ vince has had prohibition for fifty years. What are the results’ There is no unemployment in P, E. Is. Poverty is almost unknown. Compared with the other provinces the island has per square mile, twice as many people, four times as many cattle, eight times as much poultry, more railways, more post offices, more telegraph lines, more churches and its people have more money per capita in the savings banks. There are no highwaymen, thugs or -bandits, no commercialized • vice There hasn’t been an execution in the last forty years. There has been only one divorce in -fifty nine years. S.ince 1927 there has not been a single case of assault, desertion of family, neglect of children or inde­ cent assault. On roads motoring is continually fraught with danger, yet two fatalities in a year from motor accidents is the record. The total police force- of the island numbers only thirteen men and there is no penitetiary in- the province. The people., are progressive, pros­ perous and up-to-date, enjoying the comforts and luxuries of modern life. z Might it not be well of the wise heads who are trying to find reme­ dies for unemployment, poverty and crime would turn their eyes to our wonderful little province of Prince Edward Island?- I ' ed but the business and professional men. It isn’t often tne Exeter fel­ lows get a chance to crow When playing with Crediton. Neil McCon­ nell umpired. The following was the line-ups: W- S. Cole c; W. J. Hea- man 2nd;.R. N. Creech 1st; F. J. “Thou shalt not take the JJ--1- - kpptj by any one who really wants to keep * them. But it Js utterly,1 hopelessly I Knight 3rd; J J. White ss; D. Hart­ impossible for any human being in! leib cf; Dr. Amos rf; Ed. Willis If; merely human strengrn to keep | W. J. Statham p.-u them. The apostle Paul tried it, 4. ‘’Remember the Sabbath to keep it holy.” , It may seem at first that commandments can easily be *- w Crediton—W. Wenzel (3rd; impotent before the law. “For the good that I would I do not; but the evil which I would not, that I do.” Elsewhere he tells us by inspiration that the Ten Commandments, “writ­ ten” and engraved in stones,-' while glorious, are also “the ministrations of death.” To have no other gods before God means that no possession, no inter­ est, no person, no loved one, no ac­ tivity or desire of any sort whatso­ ever is allowed to come 'between God and ourselves, we have some and we have- m'andment. The second idol-worship ' shalt not bow nor serve them,” sary to make a graven image in or­ der to have an idol. One of the most deeply spiritual and searching books'of the entire New Testament, fhe First Epistle of John, en'ds "With the.words addressed ^o believers, “Little children, kiee-p yourselves from idols.” Here again,, any in­ terest whatsoever that comes 'be­ tween God and ourselves is an idol. “Either He is Lord of all, or He is not Lord of all.” / ' Taking the name of God in vain does’not mean -merely cursing and blaspheming, . though it» includes that. It also mean's misrepresent­ ing .God in ally way. Every believ­ er, whether an Israelite in Old Tes­ tament”1 times or a Christian today, __has taken the name of the Lord as a cause of this dark fact that throws sincere profession of faith. To do a Cloud over all human history and. anything that dishonours the name writes death upon all men, a Sav-I 0^ that we beai' is takiimg that name iour w’as needed, unless the human ‘in vain. Have we ever broken the race was to me lost eternally. Oui* I third commandment? And keeping the S'albbath day holy means not only a mater of outward act and observance, but of inwar/l thought and innermost heart life-as well, Whether the seventh day un­ der the Old Testament law, or the first day in . this age of grace, it is the Lord’s day whifclr- is to (be kept holy unto Him. Can we do it in our own. strength? When a lawyer tried to put the Lord Jesus Christ to the test -by a question and asked Him which was the great commandment of the law, the Lord answered: “Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy mind.” This covers the, first four commandments. And, as we know only too well, no human being can do this in human strength. That is why God provid­ ed a Savioqr. But suppose- we kept nine-tenths of tlig law perfectly', and slipped up o;nly in a single point, would not thaf be enough? No. “For whosoever shall keep t-he WhiMe law and yet offend in one point, h? is4 guilty of all” (Jake's 2:10.) “For all have sinned and come short of the glory of God.” (Rom,. 2:10). “Wherefore the law was our school- iiiaster to bring us unto Christ, that we might be justified by faith.” (Gal. 3:24.) Sunday School Lesson THE TEN .COMMANDMENTS Sunday, Aug’/7. Exodus 19: 1 to 20: 11. Golden Text And thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thine heart, and with all thy soul, and, with all thy might, (Deut. 6:5.) How m'any people keep the ten commandments today? It would be interesting to try this question on your friends during ^dinner-table cnversation and see what answers you get. As a matter 'of fact, there has been just one person in human histpry who has kept the ten com­ mandments—(the Lord Jesus Christ. Long’ before . the (commandments were ever written on tablets of stone by the finger of God they had been broken by our first parents. Adam and Eve. And they have been broken by alf who came after- Adam and Eve except one, the “Seed of the woman” and Son of God. Be- Wessons this week and nexit in the I ten commandments point to man’s, need of a -Saviour. We talk lightly about the com­ mandments; the reading of the two chapters preceding and containing them"- to a good antidote to this mis­ taken lightness of ours. The commandments were given on 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 GRANTON,. ONTARIO . - ___ ____ ___ __ c.and cried out in agony that he was 1 Bluett p; E. Faist cf; S. Brown ss; iO1W, “For the Dr. McCue 1st; F. Young cf.- H.Dr. McCue 1st; F. Young cf.; Young 2nd; A. Kuhn c; F. Wolfe, If. 15 YEARS AGO has Ex- last The instant it does, other god before Him broken the first -com- commandment forbids of any sort—“Thou down thyself to them, Is it not neces- of with friends ,M'r. Pollock of Exeter, and Mr. and two less Dull Pains In The Baclk Lasted For Days At A Time Mr. Byron Johnson, Amaranth, Man,, writes:—^I had dull pains in my baek which would last for days at a time. I Was a victim of this condition for about two years, until I was advised to use Bonn’s KidneyPills. I used one box and felt considerably better, so t con­ tinued until I felt Ml right again, I am now ready to advise anyone bothered With a dull ache in the back to use Doan ’H Kidney FTlls. ’ > / Price 50c. a box si all drug and general stores, at mailed direct on receipt of price by the T, Milburn On*, limited, Toronto, Ont CHOLERA EPIDEMIC KILLING THOUSANDS IN INTERIOR CHINA Returning from a survey trip, Doc­ tor R. W. Hart, Chief of the Amer­ ican Oriental Quarantine -Service, recently said reports from interior China indicate thousands are dying daily in virtually every porvince from a cholera epidemic. “At least 20 out of every 100 per­ sons contracting the disease are dy­ ing,” Dr Hart said. “Because of limited facilities far isolation and vaccination in China, no let up in the epidemic is expected until cold weather sets in,” 0 Dr. Hart said the present epidem­ ic is possibly the worst that had ever occurred in China and extends into Manchuria and Indo-China.*Mr. W. M. Eadie, of Toronto, ■been engaged as principal of the eter school. Mr. Frank Mallett Jr., left week for London ,^vliere he has ac­ cepted a position ih Kellogg’s fac­ tory. Miss Kedwell, operator at the Cen­ tral Telephone office, returned this .week after her holidays at her home in Petrolia. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Pollock, Detroit, are visiting here for a few days, was a former resident Mr Maurice Bobier Mrs. L. Johnson, of Buffalo and Mrs Shirley Bobier, of Guelph, spent- Monday here with ^friends and ac­ quaintances. ' I Rev. Otto Brown, of Erie, Mich., visited his parents in Crediton last week and preached n very accept­ able sermon in the Evangelical church Sunday night. Mr. McCurdy, of Minnesota, an old-time resident of Kirkton, has been here visiting relatives for a few days. z Mr, William- Sherritt, of Foxwar- ren, Man,, who has been visiting Mr. J. Jarrott, of Exeter North return­ ed home Tuesday. Mrs. Cotter and son of Toledo, are visiting with Mrs. Cottle’s mo­ ther, Mi’S Gregory. Mr. R., N. Rowe last Friday sent a load of fine furniture to London for Mr. J. S. Matz, who is moving there from Crediton East. It is an unusual ■ thing to team new furni­ ture from Exeter to London. EAGLE’S NEST A bald eagle nest, containing young eagles, believed to be than four weeks old, was found in a hollow stump on the farm of Stanley Steeper, 19 concession of McGillivray Township. They were -taken from the stump and are be­ ing kept in a pen. z Although each of the birds had a wing-spread of 58 xncnes, neither was able to fly. The parents have not been seen in the district, and although the stump has been watch­ ed since the discovery there has been no sign of them. 'Steeper and his nephew, R. Thomp­ son, were picking berries when they saw the hollow stump. More out of curiosity than for any other reason, they investigated and made the dis­ covery. , 'Stanley "Steeper is a brother of Clayton Steeper, former CJGC radio star. z SAYS WASHINGTON PLAYING I POLITICS IN SEAWAY PACT Senator Tom, of Ohio,-Native of Exe­ ter, Vacationing At Goderich;, Thinks St. Lawrence Project Will Fall Through .GODERICH, July 28.—Senator F. Tom, of Ohio, a native of Exeter, Ont., and fonner resident of Goder­ ich, is spending his vacation here. Interviewed today, he expressed doubt that the St.- Lawrence water­ way would ever be gone on with. “They are just .playing politics,” he said. “The signing of the treaty just serves to furnish ammunition for the present United States-admin­ istration.” Senator Tom blames the 18th Amendment for the wave of lawless­ ness in his adopted country, but doubts if the repeal will carry if and when put to a vote, for the reason that rural America is not either fam- ‘iliar or suffuciently concerned with the true condition of affairs in cities ' “No attempt was made to enforce the Volstead Act during the first two years of existence. This allowed the rum-runners and racketeers to ‘get set’’ and today they are in con­ trol of the Government,” said Sena-- tor Tom.1—Free Press “Besses - o’ - th’ - Barn,” Great Britain’sfinestbrass band and thirty other leading military and concert organizations; four appearances of inter­ nationally famous 2000- Voice Exhibition Chorus; Kaye Don with “Miss England III”; “The Triumph” 1932 inspiring Exposition pageant; Olympic athletes from this year’s games; Seventh Marathon Swim for world championship; two , Art Galleries; all branches of Agriculture; Engineering. What programmes, entertainment, educa­ tion, recreation. ' To avoid disappointment and inconvenience the management have arranged to accept advance Reservations far Grandstand ■ Pageant “THE TRIUMPH" every evening commencing Saturday Aug. 27,, and for any of the 2,000-Voice Exhibition Chorus concerts, Aug. 27, Sept. I. Sept, d, Sept. 10. GRANDSTAIW RESERVED SEATS: 50c and $1.00—Box Seats $1.50 each (5 chairs in each box) 2000-VOICE EXHIBITION CHORUS Ground floor reset-red 75c. $1.00 for Box Chairs Send cheque or money order without delay to Canadian National Exhibition, Toronto. WILLIAM INGLIS H, W. WATERS President. General Manager. ‘‘How would you like the defer­ red payments arranged?” asked the salesman. “Permanently,” replied the customer. McLAUGHLIN-BUICK EIGHTS ZURICH — t Miss Evaline Ayres and brother '‘Miltoh, of Detroit, are visiting with their grandmother Mrs. E; Truem­ ner. Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Kalbfleisch have returned to their home in De­ troit after visiting for some time with Mr. and Mrs. R. F. Stade. Mr. and Mrs. Sol, Zimmerman, and Mrs. J. K. Ehlers have- returned after visiting with friends at Kit­ chener. Mr. and Mrs. Hilton Truemner and family and Mrs. S. Jacobe and Mr. Conrad Truemner spent the week-end in Milverton. Mr. Harry G. Hess accompanied by his uiicle Mr. F. W. Hess, of Hen­ sail, spent a few days going to Wind­ sor, Detroit, Dearborn and other places, Mrs, Chris, Ayotte is spending a few weeks with her ‘daughter in De­ troit. Mrs, Clara Decker, who visited in Detroit for a few weeks,..has return­ ed home. . Messrs. Victor Eicft and Bill Nic­ hol were Sunday visitors with the former’s brother Mr. Lloyd Eidjt, teller of the Bank of Montreal. Mr, and Mrs. David Gottschalk of Bad Axe, Mich,, are visiting with the former’s sister liardt. Mrs. William S. tained to a dainty of her friends in honor of her sister- in-law Mi'S. Artliui; Truemner, of Toronto. Mrs. W. Finkibeinet attd daughter Miss Hazel, of Stratford, who spent a weak visiting at the home of the! former’s sister Mri? W» Ji, Hoffman, * have returned to thelf home. | Mi’s. H. LipP- Johnston enter­ tea to a number ♦ I’ve never got suchGMKRAI MOTORS PRODUCTS a thrill out of driving, Dad. This McLaughlin - Buick seems heavy enough to hug the road at any speed ♦ ♦ ♦ and what a jewel it is to handle! After once getting behind the wheel of that car I’d hate to have to drive anything with­ out Wizard Control and Ride Regulator.” McLaughlin-Buick Eights are produced irt Canada and priced from $1325 at factory, taxes extra J *■ ■"■V *t SNELL- BROS Main Street, Exeter, Ont, ©