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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Signal, 1935-4-25, Page 6:a. GODERICH, Sunday. Afternoon Plumbing, Heating -O R -- Eavestroughing W® 'In Repairs for all makes of stoves or furnaces r'r ei armies and able prices. John Pinder "hone Irl P. 0. Bas 131 Use The Signal's Cl.nlisi 0111014111 4111.1111111.111111111116 ioi STORES Grocery Specials ar e By DRAM, HAMILPON Oeiericb, Ont. -Gordon Lindsay• Smith EASILY GROW!! e -be• poseesstng a ellma e w w pro- Many liar j good vegetables on almost any pro - FLOWERS neve that !t U duce much more difficult to grow beautiful ' klud of soil. The Casteru and south - flowers than a few rows of common I ern sou, 01 eourae, L supposed growthto be and regetabtes. But this 1. not so. to the best for encouraging many respects It is easier to produce I if possible au exposure of this kind the flowers. Of Genome there are err- eau bee arranged. up to meet sil'ideal tea Wads_ lutL_.J :saes. deli- klusL ' _e et t eL _t l Gately shaded Iris and teudir i1 lilies, which certainly will not thrive clay, because the former "is warmer un neglect, but there are also a down and it also gives quicker returns from or so annals, and a few herbaceous fertilizer. It should be made to re - perennials. which require prsetieell3 ao tato molature. sect to do this plenty ail'. Take the little alyssum, for of humus, or rotted vegetable manure, edging walks or borders. it comes in must be incorporated.- Digging in several sizes up to six or eight laches strawy manure, green crops of oats, in height. 1t will grow almost any- clever, or even weeds, will prove a where and will bloom all season, if the wonderful help both to sandy and clay dead flowers are sheared off two or soils, eepecially after this additional three times with clippers or even a material has rotted. If the clay L lawn mower. I'ortulaca is another very heavy, and the ganders area which can he planted and forgotteu small. sand or ashes can he added. It likes a Trot, sunny location and does Drainage Is essential. In large gar- - Wahl much moisture. Portelne•- des 1t le+ advbwt'b' to add 111e under - too ex - will theoeallendulanor�pot mar. A rigold. ttle rg11 pensive a fair substitute wiler dringe, but If this l, be shal- thrives in almost any position, though low open ditches. Well -rotted herm- it should not be too shaded. After yard manure In the last fertilizer, but thinning no more attention is needed. of course Is not always obtainable The ordinary dwarf Freneh marigold and it le sometimes objectionable. e. is another which should not be over- looked by the gardener who has little time to devote to his hobby, nud also the Cuilfornia poppy, cosmos and Or- namental sunflower. This selection 0 Jesus, full et truth and grace, afore full .t grace than 1 at OW PM ones . I tzet DAT. Open TLt a arms, and take m• And freely for neekslidings bea! And love the thlthless sinner still. —Charles Wesley. 1ER We knotthace sinned, but we know too t we hate an Advocate with Thee, even Thine own Son. Help es -ht-eerie -•tbrgkeoess.- Alum. _Rhee through Him.. Amen. 8. S.. LESSON FOR MAY R 1136 Leeson Tose--"Bi, RAIMIMMIIM1 and Faith." Lesson Passage—At. Luke 14111 44. Golden Tent -1 John 1:8• "A certain man had two sons." It would be rash to say that where the home is right the inmates never go wrong. Still, the promises to believers Incinde their children and the instances are comparatively fee where a hope- ful outset ends in :i ‘corthleaa old age. In order to make the home the pre- paration for heaven. the first thing is to strengthen that cord of love be- tween father and e••u. Of all God's cords the tined, and perhips the strong- est. Is the cord of love. The true home of humaulo: to Ood—God trustel, communed with, beloved, i speaks out. 8o God rejoices in His ransomed. "I say unto you, that like- wise joy shall be in heaven over one sinner that repentetb, more than over uluety and nine just persons, whish need no repentant*" (Luke 15: 7). WORLD MISSIONS Kindergarten and Ghia' Werk lu the village of Olmura sire the descendants of a very old family that traces its history back through forty .netratlptt to days when over 800 peasant -fernlike swore runty to head of this house. Even today there are thirty families who pay dues as of old and look to the pre- sent Mr. Tanaka for help In time of need. Among the treasures of the bowie Is a board, 300 years old, which used to bang on the gateway and pane. people that (,hrlatlaeltt w prohibited. A Christian farmer in a neighboring village urged. Tanaka to have a day nursery the village children during the bra season. He con- sented. A woman evangelist and two young girls lived In his home for one month and carried on the day nursery. A very unhappy home was completely transformed. The Junior Young Men's Association, impressed with the spirit of love and service shown by the teachers, requested that tLe woman evangelist give them au address on Christianity. As a re- sult a group of eighteen became tn- terested in Christianity and meet weekly in Mr. Tanaka's home for worship and study. Two young men have already been baptized. There are 225 villages In this pro- vince. Three out of four of the vil- lages, where the miseion opened day nurseries last year, carried on them- selves this year, making it possible to open wort In five new Tillages. "The whole city was gathered to- gether at Peter's door." Was it a bit like that? The poor were indeed gathered at our door. The front yard was full of them, each with a ticket and a few coins In his hand, waiting, until the doors were opened, to boy something among all those hall -worn garments, something that would keep-awal the cold of the com- ing winter. The Kiwa Kindergarten mothers and the church mothers had brought everything that they could spare or no longer needed. They, themselves, bad searched out the homes of the poor. inquired of their needs and given them the tickets. For every ticket there was an ar- ticle of clothing. The blind man with a warm winter shirt, a mother with a trimmest fee eeeh of her babies, a little girl with shining eyes hugging to herself a toy, all went home happy. And was it not the spirit of the Mas- ter, working. as of old, in the heart of one woman that brought her back, confessing that she had sinned against the eplrlt of love and offering a few coins 1n pay for garments she bad coeeealed the day before/ Teen-age wort anywhere requires much faith and pstler.ce. There are Commercial, chemical fertiliser wf obeyed. (The Sermon Bible.) take Its place. For general results a I►r. Thomas Guthrie. In The Par - well -balanced fertilizer should be aides In the Light of the Present Day, wird, that is one containing a fair I loos the following to sty on The Par - proportion of nitrogen and potash. l able, of the Prodigal Sen: will give plenty of bloom, a falr•iaase- The duct -named will push the green in color stat also in heightl— growth of the vegetables and the pot - SEED it is impossible to over. ash builds up the route, hence Is im- perative for such (rope as potatoes. emphasize the importance of good seed• carr ors and fiesta. Even with a re - Other factors may be Locontrol, alar application of manure or mixed put We gardener has absolute te check gular it Is good business to add a little straight nitrogen fertiliser during the growing season. Culti- vated to along the row.) during the le going to be a failure. There is no growing season It will hasten growth, guarantee that a flower which has and quick, unchecked growth. It should given wonderful results In Great Brit- always be remembered. Is the secret atn or the Southern States will do of tender, crisp vegetables. equally well in this country, and be- cause of this the average gardener 1s well advised to secure his seed and Al'LMI R GOLDEN stock from a tellable Cana- ST. HELENS, April 22.—Mr. T. B. Man source. Taylor 1s a visitor at Clinton with his BANTAM CORN• 'Tim- -tea YIELDS. 10C—BIG Vegetable -ga is � . Yrs_ Brooks. FROM should be very Mr. Joe Hyde of Port Elgin was LITTLE SPACE productive af- the gue1t of Mr. and Mrs. Jas. Hyde fairs, and from a fraction of an acre last week. of ground ten times the yield is ex• 1 Mr. John Wallace and Mr. and Mrs. petted as would result from a similar Bill Gallagher of Norwich motored up area uuder ordinary. field conditions. on Thursday and were Easter guests Where space is limited It 1s possible I with Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Miller to grow two crops, even In those sec- , and Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Thom. Gong of Canada where the summer I Mr. and Mrs. ltd. Smith and child - season is Inclined to be short. This ren. of Toronto, were Easter Nesta over this fouudation. Weather, soli and location may be Ideal, but with- out good seed. specially selected to suit Canadian conditions, the gardeu ST. HELENS RINSO Urge °kg- 19c. I.IHBi'S.. Large 18 -ox. Tier PORK & BEANS'' al 21c KELLOGG'S CORN FLAKES' Pkgs. 25c r1.ARK'S SPAGHETTI .3 '3'"' 19c TENDER, GOLDEN WAX BEANS a Tins 23c [:001) .eSTRING BROOMS GILLETT'S LYE HARDWOOD Tin 12c CLOTHES PINS' 402. lOc cl..lysic CLEANSER 5c Is done by planting rows of very early stuff like lettuce. radish and spinach, in between later -maturing vegetables such as eorn, tematoea, parsnips and Jtwtsa chard. Hy the time the later things are beginning to need full rods the first -named group will be used and out of the way. For this sort of with Mrs. Smith's parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Webster. Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Barbour, Dor- othy and Robby Brooks, of Fergus, and Mien Connie Lew, of Toronto, wars- Moister guests with Mrs. B. J. Wools. Guests with Mrs. George Stuart re- planting eight to fifteen Inches be- I ently were MIse Anna Stuart of Tor- tween rows is sufficient, or a better ,onto: Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Mc4ean. rule would be to allow the regale 1 Mrs. Robb and Miss Grace Robb, all distance between Ole rows of corn and I of Lucan. tomatoes, for instance. then simply put I Messrs. Wilson Woods and George the early stuff In between. Where a'i McQntllin, of the O.A.0 , are home for horse or garden tractor is to be used, the summer season. about the narrowest rows for vege- 1 We regret to report that on Wed - rabies will be thirty Inches, but 1f the 1 needny last Mrs. Alex. Stuart fell on garden is golog to lar hand -cultivated I the floor and broke a bane In her and ns mneli as possible grown the thigh. folio%iug .8 111111, are aunt. tent : Let -1 The annual meeting of St. Helens nee. spinach. c•arrote, beets and I Women'. institute will be held on siudlar narrow or early vegetables, Thnretlay, May 2nd. at 230 o'clock, at twfW* inches: beans, pens, potatoes, the home of Mrs. McKenzie Wehh. staked tomntves and corn. twenty All the members are requested to be "'whys; melons, eticumbevt. nusutked pn'sent. tomtit**. twenty-four to thirty Inches.! Mr. Jack Sparks and daughter BOIL The hest location fors garden , Eileen. of ne a e. were Eatiter John Bitter. ' Is inopen potation eloping towards the -1 gueet south or east and the Ideal soil Is I Ilona.• for -,Ore holiday: wise W. wrlldratned loam. Of e.nrse, it is D. Re"herford of Kirkland Lake, Mrs. NI (.(.LTT Impossible always to eernre theLe ideal lAtex. Mordle of Toronto, Miss Irene Tla . ennditions, and Canada 1s fortunate In Wood f 'Kitchener, Miss Vera Todd SHOE PDIl._ -:1-Y Ht.amt�ale ,r. �h,a lnfl- Regarding the goi here as a type of man, and the father ns a type of God, let us study the.. the two prominent figures in this i.e•autiful parable, be- pining o-gining with the pr.sllgal. (I) His roadie t In the condition of the prodigal w.- have a picture of the misery Into which sin, having ectrarr d us from our heavenly Fath- er, has plunged its wretched votaries. Type of the sloe. r who departs from God. and • beacon to such as feel irk- some under the restraints of a pious home. he seeks happiness only to find misery : ambition, of an unhallowed liberty. he sinks Into the condition of the basest slave. (2) His chance rat mind. Sin is here represented as a madness; and who arts so contrary to sound reason, his own Interests- -ani the reality of things as a sinner? Happy such as through the Spirit of God, working by whatever means. have come to them- selves like the prodigal: and are seated, like the maniac who dwelt among the tomb. at the feet of Jesus clothed and In their right mind (3) His distress. "I perish," he said, "with hunger." (4) HUI belief. "Behind yonder blue hills away In the dim distance Hes my fathers house—a house of many mandtles, and such full supplies that the seriphs, even the hired sea- (51 'H f: –1 () �1 a ata L.ralNe�sion. and to spare M r tion. "I will arra and go to m7 hither" Remove the prodigal, and setting conscience on the bench, let ns take his pure. No pro- digal ever sinned against an earthly, as we hove done against intr heaven- ly Fathet. Well, therefore, may we go to Him, with the ontritlon of the. prodigal In our hearts and his confesslon on our lips: "Father, I have sinned against heaven and in Thy sight." The Spirit of God help- ing us thus to go to God, be assured that the father, who, seeing his son afar off, run to meet him, fell c.n his neck and kissed him, was but an image of Him who. not sparing His own Son, but giving flim up to death that we might 11.•. Invites and now watts your coming. The Fanner (1) "11.,:. the father reeelved his son. Aa soon as the wanderer la recognized,. on flylna feet the old man runs to meet him. and ere the son has time 6 o to speak a .vord, the father has him inhis arta, presses him to hla bosom, trsat*=1iik sate g1sMa--Wehsttr I an(l e,v.•rucg his cheek vllttr maim- eneToronto. MaswPa Dorothy anti DOT;`e fiis'rolee asi"u°eya ene Webster. Mise Lobel Miller of for joy. And thin Is God --God as Stratford Normal Sehool. Mr. John I He is drawn by the hand and seen Foran of Ayton. Miss Dorothy Me- In the fnee of Him whom He sent to Qni11111 of Windsor, Miss Jeno Web- seek- and sive um, to bring us back, ter of Wingham. ilugh McCrostte, I to °pen n say of reconclltatton—the Gordon Miller. Dorothy Miller. Lour- God who. unwilling that any should ene Miller. Norman Weathcrliead and petish,.insites and wafts our homing. (2) How the father treated the prodigal., -The ring he gave him sig- nifies here the espousals between Christ and His Church; It may be the token of her marrbage, the pees - port of those who are blessed to go to the marriage sapper of the iamb. The uaked,,,Lmt was a sign of a'rvitnde. Thetietiee the order to pat shoes his feet was tantamount to the de- claration from the father's lips the' the prodigal was not to be regarded as a tierrant, hnt as a son; that to him bebnngcd ail the prlviland poases- atons of sonahtp: that he whe had never lost his place In the father's heart was now to resnme 1t at bin table amt in hia hones. (1) 11.4.4' the father rejnleed over the prodigal. Grief retiree; joy mnat have its place. To these eervant* the father had never told his grief; but now the prodigal has eons stack, be ROI Al. KIRK COFFEE 1 -Ib. Tin 39c ROlAL iORK 1/2 Ib. pkg. 28c TEA ROYA1, YORK MATCHES 3 Roxee 25c LO X TOILET SOAP SPE('i.1L BLEND 4 for 25c BLACK TEA .1 -Ib. bag. 39c HEST PASTRY FLOUR to -Ib. hag 65c DERRY CHEESE 2 1. ""e. 25c J. Calvin Cutt P600e116or216 .1, i:ii FILL your cereal bowl with, Ke1- 1omra . H&e triep- itla. A great luncheon dish. loathe thins before bedtime. RIC! Lrispies crackle in milk or erM11—a sound that children can't resist. Fine for the'nursery supper. They promote restful sleep. Nour- ishing and easy to digest. At grocers everywhere in the Mother Goose story pack- age that children love. Made by Kellogg in London. Ont. -c- 'Tenn. Thom of Lueknow eontinnatlon' school. There w-na n'large attendance at they Easter meeting of the Y.P.S. on Sun- day evening. Grn1r, Weatherhead rend the w-riptnre lesson and Cnyler Ramage gave the itihle eharncter on •]Iery.Y-, ts, Wetter _st Not wood e,itrIhated a reading, "Life's Grime of Ball." The gaster topic was taken by ,Mea. W. A. Miller and Mtss W. D. Rtrtherfnrd rent some Raster poems Musical nnmttrrs toetnded a sole by Vern Tnylnr, a filet by Helen and Conon Miller and the singing of a group of Easter iymns led by Mr. Wilkinson. .1 sonery G. R. I)AVIE.S iN ROAD AC('[i)ENT Mr. G. 1t. Davies, formerly °reenlst of St. George's church here, now of flw-en Sound. received Injuries In s recent motor car RN 1dent, se ettrnn- Irked by The Owen Sound Sun -Times: Mesare. Robert Dyke. of the Rank of Montreal staff here. and Mr. G. B. Dories. orgnnlat of St. George's Ale Olean ehureh. were 'helms of a motor ear accident late Tuesday night ea they were on their way from Toronto Ile Owen Sound, as the result of which the latter Is suffering 'severe Injuries. Mr. Dyke went to Toronto on Monday to aing neer the radio from one of the hroadeasting atatlona, and Mr. ilavles eeted as his amompanlet. and the se- eldent necnrred at Palermo. near 1 onkeville. Something went wrong with the steering wheel, and the ear left the road, striking * milk stand. Mr. Davies wan hurtled throngh the wledshMM or the door, and snfered the fracture of a rib, and was quite badly ent nil by ern omit, there hell a had eat on the bort of his hun& and several rota oa hia body and legs. Mr. Dyts earapsd with a severe shaking ap- Mr. Davies N nation geed pee grass toward recovery. - :-=RELIEVE PEAIOIIC PAIN I° you suffer peri- odic pain and discomfort try Lydia S. Pinkham's 'tablets. in most bey bring welcome relief. As Mrs. Caroline New- man says, 'They ease the pee. - ' 4 �Mn R Chaps; Route 4, Tilbu r et amts. i sobered /IOM' thing 'NAM*. Had such backsthlia and h cies 1 was wore stet. Yost T baa Int them help fhtij pair BROWN LABEL - 334 1/2 Ib. (RANGE PEKOE =h ib. __ at present five groups of teen-age girls in Cartmell, one group corresponding to each of the four years in the city government high school, and one for graduates. In fact a child on grad- uating from kindergarten, If she en- ters our public school first year group, may pass year by year from one group to the next, until finally she enters the graduates'. group where we hope the years of Christian training will result in rounded Christian character and au open allegiance to Jesus Christ. These groups are small, but they plan their programs and so express the needs and desires of the particular age of the group. Projects bare been earrledt through, such as a concert to raise funds to send girls to camp, a mother -end -daughter party, and, even today, they were making plana for entertaining the students of the school for the blind and sharing /bets Chrtatnus cheer with them. Of these girls. sixteen went to our girls' camp at Lake Yamanaka in July.— May McLaehlan—Mlsslomary In Japan. "No one could do so much to restore and preserve the purity of the beautiful English language as the radio announcer+."--t%Hrtrude Ather- ton. West Street ELECTRIC SHOP WR CARRY A COMPLETE STOCK OF Electrical Appliances, Fixtures, etc. Electric Wiring of ell kinds Estates gives se aJ lKlt1 .Ji FRANK McARTHUR Telephone 82 — 'Goderich The barrenest of all mortals 1s the sentimentalist. "Whoever will preeett'f'a 'thirR1RR1"— most also take care of the body to which the spirit 1z bound."—Albert F.Ineteln. 'WHEN YOU DISCOVER A MISTAKE IN THE SPECIFICATIONS ,e -. AND IT MUST "-_-_ BE CORRECTED BEFORE YOU SEE YOUR CUSTOMER ....AND YOU - NEED THE - j--- r • CHIEF'S, AUTHORIZATION Use that tei ephon. beside you! A Long Distance call to Head Office will save lthe situation. • Long Distance is always economical . it uvea time and money. Consult the rates in the front pages of your directory. You can talk 100 [miles or so for as little as 30 cents. S IL -411111111- - _. . ww Mdauter