The Wingham Advance-Times, 1936-09-10, Page 2PAGB TWO WINGHAM ADVANCE-TIMES Thursday, Sept. 10 th, 1936
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*
very many
m, that in
the Exhibition at this great
exposition. Each day the Dir-
have a luncheon and
particular group as
On Friday the editors
have
their
were
pealed to us was his statement that
this industry would prosper the bet
ter if Canada kept herself Canadian
as that was whal the visitors wished
to see.
Every dollar of tourist business is
an added income to our country and
helps all classes of people and for this
reason Mr. Dolan classed it as one
of the most important.
4; 4< *
ABOUT AUSTRALIA
One exhibit, out of the
that deserve much attentu
terested us greatly at the Canadian
National Exhibition was the excellent
display by Australia. The wonderful
display of its products are worthy of
special mention, raisins and -wool be-
jpb the main items in this regard.
There was a section of this display
; devoted to a motion picture depicting
I the country as a beautiful healthy
place in which to live and also giv-
jing some interesting facts in regard
j to the country.
! Australia has its unemployed back
‘to work. The number now on their
relief rolls is the same as in the boom
' days of 1929. For three years now
’ they have balanced their budget or
have had a surplus. These astounding
facts are the more important for dur
ing that time they have not increas
the Canadian National Exhibition.
Perennial weeds cost the Dominion
of Canada about $100,000,000 a year.
This is a startling fact, one that no
doubt many agriculturists know, em
phasizes the already great desire of
the Department of Agriculture, both
Dominion and Provincial, to have co
operation in stamping out this men
ace.
People living in towns and villages
edn be of a great help to aid the gov
ernments in this campaign by keep
ing their properties free of noxious
weeds. It is a neighborly act to des
troy weeds.
* 4:
Fall Fair
away.
* 4<
would expect that
THE SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON
CANADA’S TOURIST BUSINESS
Friday was Press Day at the Can
adian National Exhibition and the
editors of many papers, dailies and
weeklies, were guests of the Direct
ors of
annual
ectors
some
guests,
so honored.
The guest speaker fur this occasion
was Mr. D. Leo Dolan, Manager uf
the Canadian Travel Bureau of the
Department of Railways and Canal'.,
Ottawa. This Bureau was organized
by the Government to promote the
tourist industry for Canada and was .
formed with the hearty approval of i
the Provincial Governments and all j
parties at Ottawa and the press. That * ed their army or in other ways creat-
this bureau had done much to create} ed an artificial employment,
greater tourist business is most grat- i When the pound sterling was very
ifying. Last year the revenue from ' low a few years ago they placed Aus
tins “industry" was $202,000,000 and ' tralian money on a parity with the
it is expected that this year it will J pound but no great drastic manipula-
reach a total of $300,000,000 as the
revenue this year is must greater so
far than for the same period last year.
Mr. Dolan is a dynamic speaker
and his word picture of Canada as
the world’s finest playgrounds, excel
lent for hunting and fishing, must be
told to people of other countries.
This was the object of the Travel j
Bureau and he asked for the co-opera- •
tion of those present.
. Each province has something to of- I
fer the tourists and he said that On
tario’s lakes were of special import
ance in this regard.
One point of his address which ap-
made in their
country such as
such a splendid
r
monetary
Australia
showing,
tion was
system.
When a
can make
it would seem that they must have
something in their books that we can
well adopt.
ijs * :|e *
WEEDS CAUSE GREAT LOSS
Most of us become more or less
bored by figures representing this or
that but one set of figures that drew
our attention with a start was part
of the information given at the ex
hibit of the Department of Agricul
ture in the Government Building at
*
LOWER RATES
on
LONG-HAUL
TELEPHONE CALLS
Effective from September 1st
4
Again rates for long distance telephone
service have been revised. Reductions on
calls to points over 130 air-line miles dis
tant became effective from September 1st.
This is the sixth long distance rate revi
sion in the past seven years. It will mean
substantial savings for users of the service.
And remember, low night rates on both
Station-to-Station and Person-to-Pcrson
calls, now apply every evening after 7
o’clock, and all day Sunday.
THE COUNCIL IN JERUSALEM.
Sunday, Sept. 13—Acts 15: 1-35;
Galatians 2.
Goldejn Text;
For, brethren, ye have been called
unto liberty; only use not liberty for
an occasion to the flesh, but by love
serve one another. (Gal. 5; 13).
All false religions teach that -men
are saved by doing good works for
God. The gospel of Jesus Christ,
which is the only true “religion,", or
way of life, declares that men arc
saved, not by anything then can do
for God, but by something God has
done for them. There is a vast diff
erence here—the difference between
death and life. The doing of good
works has never saved any soul since
Adam fell. But the countless num
bers of souls who have been saved
by accepting what God has done for
them have done many good works—
not in order to be saved, but as a
result of being saved.
A sharp, clearly defined crisis con
fronted. the Christian Church in less
than twenty years after its birth. The
message of the gospel, the heart of
Christianity, was threatened by what
would have been a fatal attack had it
succeeded. And the attack, like all
the most dangerous attacks, came
from within, not without. Members
of the Christian Church, Jewish be
lievers, travelled from Judaea to the
Gentile mission field in Antioch,
where many had been saved under the
preaching of Paul and Barnabas by
simple faith in Jesus Christ as their
Saviour, and began teaching: “Except
ye be circumsized after the manner
of Moses," ye cannot be saved.” That
is to say, they began teaching that
salvation depended upon keeping the
law of Moses and doing gobd works
for God.
Discussion and dissension followed,
and the situation became so serious
that Paul and Barnabas, with others,
were delegated to travel to Jerusalem
and bring the question before the
apostles and elders.
The missionaries had a wonderful
report to make, as they told with joy
how the Gentiles had been ‘ saved by
simple faith in Christ. The legalistic
Jewish members of the Jerusalem
Church took issue at once, saying,
“that it was needful to circumsize
them, and to command them to keep
the law of Moses.”
So the formal council at Jerusalem
“came together for to consider of this
matter.”
Peter made a profound impression
as he told how the Gentiles had heard
the word of the gospel, and that God
had “put no difference between us and
them, purifying their hearts by faith.”
Then Peter made this challenging
statement: “Now, therefore, why
tempt ye God to put a yoke upon the
neck of the disciples, which neither
our fathers nor we are able to bear?
But we believe that through the grate
of the Lord Jesus Christ we shall be
saved, even as they.”
An impressive silence followed.
Then Barnabas and Paul spoke, “de
claring what miracles and wonders
God had wrought among the Gen-
“And. what about sheets and blan-1 tiles by them."
kets?" - 1 It is noticeable that these mission-
“Born among ’em, sir,” I aries and evangelists had solid and
Our
weeks
*
is now
*
only three**
the schoolOne
children’s faces during the past week
would be sad ones. Such is not the
case. We pass them every day as
they go -up the hill to their studies,
and their faces are
of life's enjoyment.
4= *
The abolishment
oils was urged at the session of the
Ontario Municipal Association in
Toronto last week by a couple of city
aidermen. This suggestion
not be taken seriously as
councils serve a useful place
system of government.
4< 4= 4' *
Over 500 Ontario farmers are now
branding chickens so if they are stol
en the thief may more easily be ap
prehended. Chicken thieving is a
mean crime and one that takes from
the producer one of his best cash
crops.
beaming symbols
4* 4<
of county coun-
should
county
in our
* *
es e< 4<
It has been said that the Spanish
revolution will be a long and bloody
afair, All wars are bloody but some
how we never seem to realize the
fact until another conflagration is in
full swing.
* s|s * *
It is said that there will be more
young partridge survive this year as
they thrive on dry weather. This will
not help any of us as there is no
season for partridge this year.
:<s 4-
The Lord Mayor of London said
he had been almost killed with Can
adian hospitality. This is one method
of near-killing with which we heart
ily agree. *
4s 4: * *
Jane Bernhardt earns her living be
ing shot out of a canon . On Thurs
day night at the C.N.E. something
went wrong and she was injured when
her assistants did not catch her.
There' are many ways of making a
living and we think most of US will
leave this particular method to this
young lady or some other dare-devil.
4: 4f * ❖
Nails, wire, glass and tin were tak
en from the "stomach of a man at
Letchfield, Ill. The Peterborough
Examiner says probably he’d, been
getting his own meals while his wife
was away at the summer cottage.
Wally, the bachelor of the Star, will
probably say, what difference
that make.
undeniable facts to repcut, not human
opinions to offer. Facts are very con
vincing.
James, the recognized head of the
council, called their attention .to the
fact that Peter had reported God’s
first visitation of the Gentiles unto
salvation by faith in Christ (in the
house of Cornelius), and thus God
had begun to “take out of them (the
Gentiles) a people for His. name.”
This calling out from the Gentile
world of those who are willing to
believe and be saved is a process that
has ’been going on from that day to
this.
Then James quoted an Old Testa
ment prophecy, in. Amos 9:11, 12.
This prophecy declares that, after the
Gentile world has been evangelized
and believers have been called out
to become God’s people, the Israel’s
Messiah, Jesus Christ, will return, and
will build again the tabernacle of
David, which is, fallen down.” This
will be followed by the turning, of all
the Jews to the Lord, their Messiah,
and a world-wide seeking of the Lord
by “all the Gentiles.” s
This lesson chapter has been called
dispensationally, the most important
passage in the New Testament, giving
as it does “the divine purpose for
this age and for the beginning of the
next.” The decision of tiie council
was “that we trouble not them which
from among the Gentiles are turned
to God.” The false teaching of the
legalistic Jewish believers, or “Juda-
izers” -was disavowed by the Jerusal
em council, and letters were written
to the Church at Antioch conveying
the decision, the substance of which
was that which Paul later wrote by
inspiration: “Ye are not under the
law, but under grace” (Rom. 6:14).
But the Gentile believers were ex
horted “to show grace by abstaining
from practices offensive to godly
Jews,” such as eating meats that* have
been offered to idols.
Paul’s inspired and impassioned let
ter to the Galatians discusses very
fully this same question of the rela
tion of Christian believers to the law
of Moses. No human being has ever
been able to keep the whole law, but
all have come under the condemnation
of the law of God (which was the law
of Moses), for “all have sinned.” Je
sus Christ, Himself sinless, kept the
law, fulfilling the whole law, and then
accepted in His own person the pen
alty of man’s sin, dying in the" place
of sinners. ' Those who receive’4 this
great gift and sacrifice in their be
half, by receiving Christ as their Sav-
ious, are saved. “For the wages of
sin is death: but the gift of God is
eternal life through Jesus Christ our
Lord” (Rom. 6:23).
. Paul sums up the whole matter at
the end of the Galatian lesson chap
ter, showing that it would be fatal to
tell men they can be saved only by
keeping the law. Here is Paul’s pas
sionate and inspired declaration: “I
do not frustrate the grace of God:
for if righteousness come by the law,
then Christ is dead in vain.”
.
THEY JUST SEEM
TO TASTE BETTER!
There’S a special goodness in Kellogg’s Corn Flakes.
It’s partly their delicious flavor — never successfully
copied. Partly oven-fresh crispness, protected by the
patented WAXTITE inner wrapper.
Ask for the world’s leading Corn Flakes, made by '
Kellogg in London, Ont., and give your family the best.
CORN FLAKES
4
Nothing takes the place of
From all Stations in Eastern Canada
GOING DAILY —SEPT. 19 to OCT. 3 inclusive
Return Limit: 4S days
TICKETS GOOD IN
O COACHES at fares approximately lc per mile.
O TOURIST SLEEPING CARS at fares approximately lj£c per mile.
• STANDARD SLEEPING CARS at fares approximately 1 J^c per mfle.
COST OF ACCOMMODATION IN SLEEPING CARS ADDITIONAL
...
BAGGAGE Checked. Stopovers at Port Arthur, Armstrong, Chicago and west.
Tickets, Sleeping Car reservations, and all information from any agent. ASK FOR HANDBILL
CANADIAN NATIONAL
would “BOTTOMS UP” CAKE
'Have you any knowledge
satin departments.”
all my life in them,
It'
silk and
“Spent
of the
sir.”
By Betty Barclay
Those golden, juicy peaches are
here in abundance—so now’s the time
to add a peach upside down cake to
the list of all the upside down cakes
you have learned to make. Even after
you have said a regretful good-bye
to fresh peaches, you can still make
use of this recipe—for it’s just
good with canned peaches.
Peach Upside Down Cake
114 cups sifted cake flour
. 114 teaspoons double-acting baking
r powder
'14 teaspoon salt
% cup granulated sugar
4 tablespoons softened butter or
other shortening
1 egg, well beaten
14 cup milk
1 teaspoon vanilla
4- tab.lespoons butter
14 cup brown sugar, firmly packed
2 cups sliced peaches (fresh or can
ned)
Sift flour once, measure, add bak
ing powder, salt, and sugar, and sift
together three times. Add butter.
Combine egg, milk, and vanilla, Add
RRMWHMMWWMMMBHW———XRKDI
as
to flour mixture, stirring until all
flour is dampened} then beat vigor
ously 1 minute.
' Melt 4 tablespoons butter in 8x8x2
inch pan or 8-inch skillet over low
flame; add brown sugar (^ teaspoon
nutmeg may be mixed with, brown su
gar, if desired), and stir until melted.
On this arrange peach slices. Turn
batter over contents of pan. Bake in
moderate oven (350° F.) 50 minutes, *
or until done. Loosen cake from sides
of pan with spatula. Serve upside
’down on dish with peaches on top.
Garnish with whipped cream, if de
sired.
Wife (heatedly): “You’re lazy, you
are worthless, bad-tempered, shiftless,
You’re a thorough liar,”
Husband (reasonably): “Well, my
dear, no man is perfect.
Buyers OfE
SPAIN’S POPULAR FRONT GOVERNMENT RESIGNS AS REBELS MAKE GAINS
i
With the Spanish rebel forces vic
torious at Irun arid in the southwest,
the Spanish Popular Front govern*
troops at the northern rebel
^tatters..
incut, headed by Jose Giral Pereira, by Francisco Largo Caballero, leftist
quit and the country finally had a leader. The picture shows General
Socialist-Communist cabinet, headed
Miguel Cabanellas, guiding hand of
the Spanish revolt, reviewing Moorish
n
gaRmnnnBnnnnMMmanaanniiaB
M: Maitland Creamery ■
THE UNITED FARMERS’ CO-OPERATIVE ■
COMPANY, LIMITED.
WlnalrMn^ • ■ Ontario.
Phone 27i
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