HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1929-4-17, Page 2WNDNEi$DAY, XPRU 17th, 19 9.
And the hilltop gardens
yield this fragrant tea.
Vresh from the gardens'
SAYS GODERICH
NATIONAL PORT
MX. GEORGE SPOTTON, NORTH
HURON, SPEAKS IN THE COM.
MONS — ASSAILS GOVERN-
MENT.
At the outset, Mr. Speaker, I
like to`read the amendment as MON'.
ed by the hon. member for South
Wellington (Mr, Guthrie), benzin
there evens to have been some mis-
understanding, intentionally or other
wise, in connection with this amend-
ment. Any person who understands
English and who dace not wish to
misrepresent matters, will find that
there is not a word in this amend-
ment regarding higher protection. In
fart. if there wa a syllable in it re-
commending higher protection for
COMFORT FOR GOD'S PEOPLE 1 But now the prophet goes en and
— '
sees, not a coming of the Lord that
Sunday, April 21.e*lealan 40: 1-11 was seven centuries ahead, but a
Mining of the Lord that was twenty-
Colden Text ' seven centuries or more ahead, as he
As one whom his mother comfort-
eth, so will I comfort you, deelares : "And the glory of the
13..) iI4-'' 99: , Lord ehall be revealed, and all flesh
shall be revealed, and all 'flesh l
a
authorFor the mouth of the Lord hath could he dare say this? l
Ti he destructive critics of the Bible „
have told us that the Book of Isaiah • spoken."
was necessarily written by two -or ; All flesh did not see the glory of
more persons; it could not possibly the Lord when Christ came ninteen
have been written by one man. The
centuries ago and linea n numanity
reason given is that the earlier part as a mart and died in shame as the
of the book, such as the first 39 , sinner's substitute, and was raised
chapters, declare God's judgments again. But that same Christ is cora-
upon and punishment for sin; while
ing again to thle earth in His glorlf-
the latter part of the book, such as
ied body. "Behold, He (emeth in the
from chapter 40 on, declares God's cioa;
and every ye shall see
i e
forgivnesscs . of sin and restoration of hin.„.,, (Rev; 1 ; 7).
the sinner. And no one man, say the
critics, would talk about judgment . Do men need Christ? The prophet
and puniehment for sin and forgiv- answers: All flesh i gr..ns and all
ness of sin. thegoodliness thereof is as the
It seems incredibly strange reaeon- flower of the fleld ; the grass wether -
Ing, does it not? As though a human eth, the flower fadethat Yee, num
father could not punish his own chile need Christ, Men are weeeness and
for sinning, and tion put his arms helpleesneee, and, left to theraseivese
around that child and taae him MOS, their life would be brief and ephena
era'.
to his heart and show hien a father's
love. Many a writer of the scriptures "But the weld of God hall etand
does the earn(' thing, elating path forever." And Christ is the went of
God's righteous judgments and his God t John 1 :14). Ile: auee of mans
forgiving mercy. If one and the awfel heed God sends the comfortiers
same God can t am both attitudee, salvation If -Carle, as man's Sate -
one and the :Sara(' man can tel about
this. leaiah. teas deruealeir eo hying
The first 119 chaptere of the book geed tidings to lift up Leeeir voice
of Isaiah look toward the captivities. with strength. Wien Christ the Kieg
'The remainder of tile book, from of the lewe returns he will establath
chapter .10 on, looks beyond.the cap- His Kinecioni on earth and male:
tivities. "The cherate in etele al -out David', throne at Jerusalem the tan -
which so much has been Saha,idis no tre of righteous rule and untold bles-
more remarkable than the cnge in in for Judah and Israel and all the
theme. A proait who was aleo a pat_ eaeta. He will rule "with strong
rot would not writ, of our eimi end aniel, ant His arm shall rule for
coming captivity of his people in the him."
same exultant and joyous style which Then the prophet terns to the
he would us e to des Ti, their rideea a•mierness of Christ the Saviour ae
tion, bleseirie enel power." Shepherd. "He -.hall feed His flock.
Still further let us remember that like a shepherd; He shall gather the
embs with his arm, and carry them
the Lord Jesus Christ, in John 12: :
In His bosom."
37-44 ascribed to the prophet Isaiah Some people say the Old Testa -
quotations from Isaiah 53 -and Isaiah .
6. As so frequently, Christ and the obsolete book, to be put on the anti -
critics do not agree. euarian's shelf, and of no practiea'
After God's punishment came interest and value today. Yet in t"
Cod's comfort. "Comfort ye, com- lesson are some of the most precious
fort ye my people, saith your God." passages of the New Testament, et
The prophet had been faithful in tel- tered many centuries before by an
ling Judah that Israel must go into Old Testament prophet. They 1'
captivity. Now he was div- I repeated in James 1;10, I Peter 1:2e
inely empowered to prophesy 25, and .by the Good Shepherd Him -
what lay beyond the punishment and eelf in John 10. We need the Old
captivity, and declare wondrous com- i Testament to understand the New.
fort and blessing. Jerusalem is now
told "that her warfare is accomplish- i
ed, that her inquity is uardoned; for ;
she hath received of the Lord's hand t
double for all her sine."
How would the comforter come?
How could the forgivenees and red
storation be accomplished? In only I
one -way : by him who is the way, I
Christ the Son of God. It is startling I
Christ became man, a prophecy of 1
to read here seven centuries before
John the Baptist in th' eity word,$ 1
that he quotei eeven centuries later :
"The voice of him that erieth in the
wilderness, Prepare ye the way of 1
the Lord, make straight in the desert
for our God." Turn to Methew 3 : 3 I
end Mark 1 : 3 and we read the same I
words on John the Baptiet's lips. I
Sins were going to be dealt with I
victoriously when Christ should come,
and so the prophet Isaiah (teetered
that every valley should be exalted,
every mountain and 'hill should be
made low, the crooked sheer(' b•• I
made straight, and the rough places II
plain, Wrongs v:ere to he righted a
only God could make them right.
This was to be doneat the first com-
ing of Christ ; and it was done.
i
Stockyards Manager
• _
itiuml
ASTHMA
F
No smokes—No anuff—No scrams
Just clean Capsules
Ivir. 'Hemmen Picotte, Penelanguishene,
Ont., had terrible Asthma, '24 yettrs.
He didn't dare lie clown. lie says:
"Before 1 had taken two 51.00 boxes
of RAZ-MAII 1 felt relief, yee 4 years
I have had no trouble" . so don't
.endure that awful slow strangulation
any longer. Your druggist has iis
RAZ
111
iSIR. GEO. SPOTTON, M. P
this country, I would not support
the resolution either by -smite or
vote. ,It reads:
That all the words after the word
"that" be stricken out and the fol-
lowing substituted therefor:
This houtte regrets that the finan-
cial proposals of the government
make no provision for reasonably
safeguarding and Protecting --
Not industriee, not the manufact-
uring concerns, not any great cor-
poeation, but safeguarding and pro-
tecting-
-the interests of those "engaged in
agricultural pursuits-
-that means farmers-
-or in industrial" employment in
Canada.
Those are the men who carry the
dinner pail, who toil from early
morning until late at night, who are
handed a lemon while the manufact-
uring corporation cuts the melon.
Those who are referred to in the a-
mendment are the ageictilturists
and the industrial workers. There
is not in the amendment a word a-
bout high protection for any indust-
ry in the Dominion of Canada.
Since the Minister of Finance (Mr.
Robb) and the Prime Minister (Mr.
Mackenzie King) referred to me
last year as a Tory, I should like to
make a little correction. This a-
mendment is brought in by the Lib-
eral -Conservative party. I am sorry
the Minister of Finance is not in his
seat. I suggested to him last year
that I should prefer that he call Inc
a Liberal -Conservative. We had in
this country a government, the Bald
win -Lafontaine administration, which
resigned in 1851, on account of the
radical element in the Reform party
'n those days. Baldwin went into
TH1g
9NE BOX ENDED
‘7HIS SUFFERINGS.
Sorious Bowel Condition
Relieved
by "Froit-a-tive$"
>3,
MR, PAGE
Mr. James Page of Cabanm.P,Q., was
in a very dangerous conclition. The
Constipation from which he had
suffered for five years was undermining
his whole system. It, was not only
ruining his digestion and poisoning his
blood, but had also brought on painful
piles. Various treatments failed to
help him until he tried "Fruit-a-tives,"
made of intensified fruib .juices com-
bined with scientific medicinal ingredi-
ents. "One box of this wonderful
medicine," he writes, "gave me
complete relief. 'Fruit-a-tives' gives
results as nothing else does, and I
sincerely recommend it to every suf-
ferer." Try this great medicine.
25c. and 50c. a box—at dealers every-
where
servatives had become very small.
The way was thus cleared for the
moderate men in both provinces to
unite to form a new party. In 1854
Macdonald succeeded in uniting the
moderate Conservatives and the mod
erate Liberals of both provinces
under the leadership of Sir John
Macdonald, and he was joined by
most of the Tories, This coalition
wasbitteely attacked extreme
men on both sides, but Robert Bald-
win came out of his retirement for
a moment to approve of it; it was
surely time for a party which repre-
sented the views of the moderate
men of both races. Of the new
party the Upper Canadian leader
was Sir Allan MacNab, but in the
next year he was quietly shelved in
favour of Macdonald.
I do not see how the Reform party
can claim any connection with him;
The Moderate Liberals, who were the
largest group, and the moderate
Conservatives, who were the second
largest, united under Sir John Mac-
donald and they were called the Lib-
eral -Conservative party. Where the
Reform party ever got a license to
call themselves Liberals is more than
I can find in the pages of history. I
have in my library Hansard ahnost
from the first time is was publiehed,
and looking over all the Hansards as
I have done, it seems to have been
the bounden duty of every govern-
ment after they have been one year
in office—and it takes them about a
year to get things well oiled and
greased and running smoothly—to
claim in every speech from the throne
that the country is prosperous. The
next year it is more prosperous, the
third year more prosperous still, and
so on. This administration is some-
thing like Doctor Coue: every day,
in every Way, they are growing bet-
ter and better. But this seems to be
a duty -which followers of an ad-
ministration must perform. They
will admit in private that things are
not prosperous in the country, but.
in their public speeches they must
Proclaim that Canada is prosperous.
In past history, when any young
country was prosperous it always
increased in population, yet under
this administration since 1921, not
withstanding the fact that they have
spent 516.000.000 on immigration,
to bring in 660,000 immigrants and
drive out 700,000 people, we are
not keeping even our natural in-
crease. I wonder why so many are
leaving for a foreign soil when this
country is do prosperous. But I will
.711E DURANT "40" DE 1111d SEDAN
THE
D KANT
Establishes New Standard
Among Fours
Red Seal Continental Motor
Bendix Four -Wheel Brakes
Morse Silent Timing Chain
Full Force Feed Lubrieation
Passenger Cars
Fours and Sixes
from $675 to $2095
f .o.b,Leaside, Ont.
Standard Factory Equipment
Taxes Extra
B 429
6-7HE ne•-ar Durant Forty opens the door to immensely greateel
satisfaction than has previously been available in the four-,
cylinder field.
You cannot fully realize the true worth of the thoughtfully
improved Durant models . . . (either in the four or six -cylinder
series) . .. until you sit in their comfortable seats and then test
them in motion . . . at any speed you like!
Detailed description of all Durant models will be mailed to you
on request , . . or better still . . . is obtainable near-by—at your
local Durant dealers'.
BUILT .01'
DURANT /sIOTORS of CANADA LIMITED
TORONTO CANADA
RUGBY TRUCKS N '/, TON TO 11,/, TON CAPACITIES
ALEX. ANDERSON
BRUSSELS ONTARIO
ra---,—.—.• — — —. _ _ _. .,,_
will be taken by the government to
to say :
That the King administration had obtain, if possible, means whereby
largely failed to implement its plat- bills may be eancted by and with
form on tariff mid had largely failed the advice and consent of the House
toinduce economies in public expend- of ,C.ommons under conditions sim-
taxation, which was imperative ; that
itures that would lead to reduced ilar in principle to those which have
been sanctioned by theaparliatrnent of
financial condition of the country the United Kingdom.
burden of taxation such as we have proposed to take, and the Prime Min- SUNDAY.onowm.ed inc
and set
was extremely serious, and that as He was asked by the Right Hon.
Canada should not longer support a Arthur Meighen just what steps he The Lord
at present in the face of reductione' ister cleclared that the government me in a large place.--Pra. 118-5.
long side of us; this condition of af- recess. Well the recess passed, the MONDAY.
fairs might have had very seelous house opened, and the Prime Minis- In the Lord Jehovah is everlasting
l consequep ces. ter informed the house that he pro -
'Minister this afternoon had been posed to call a conference with the strength.--,Isa. 26:4,
provinces upon the question. Near
TTJESDAY.
I
If the speech made by the Prime —=—....
made on the hustings during an el- the end of the session, on June 18,
fr BIBLE THOUGHTS
— For This Week —
a Thoughts encosortzsd. will Dross a
prisaless heritug• sitos Yoars•
of taxation in the United States a• would consider the matter during tha
campaign, I could have con- 19-
25 Mr. Meighen again asked And this is love, that we walk af-
actiongratulated him upon his excellent whether the government had any -
ter his commandments. -2 John 6.
stump speech, but in the, parliament thing to lay before the proposed coll-
ard position in 'Quebec, and the come back to that 171 a moment. posed to have vision, and to lead and plied that the government had ' con-
sidered no recommendations and had Suffer the little children to come
rEaE3
WEDNESDAY.
retirement; Lafontaine took a Judi- of Canada the Prime Minister is sup- •
ference, and the Prime Minister re -
alter the election of 1854 that gov- night a statment of the Hon. Thome Speaker, what high sounding n tl • to offer but would take el
ther, unto me, and forbid them not. Mark
were succeeded by Morin and Hincke I should like to use as my text to- point the way. But I ask you, Mr.
. , think that the gesture of the Prime
sessions since then, and I can only
THURSDAY
he had attended a convention in Re- lips to -day? We knew nothing more • •
ministration ,found itsdlf in 1925, - A I. 6 1025 He says : !about his policy, if indeed he has,
,•rnment found itself very much in• A. Crerar, made in Winnipeg; after note of statesmanship fell from his thie Imi7tter in the recess. Sir,
the position in which the present ad- have been many recesses and many 10:14.
'n that they had not a majority in
the house; that there were
several groups. But unlike this ad-
ministration they did not attempt to
carry on. These were the groups
that were elected. as laid down in my w
history, and I am quoting from the Itre the eonsidered opinion of the stump speech there as he did tine al-
ai h school history used in Ontario. Hon. Thomas A. Crerar. He goes on ter noon, but it did not mean a thing. If he meant it, what does he purpoee po.__maaa 1,15.
to do to -day about it? If he did not
He advocated some kind of ref orm trl
mean it then I ask this house and tide
. _a • of the senate, as he had done in t de
al ,
In the minds of many people the . one, when he sat down than when he Minister was made for vote -catching For I am with thee, saith the ,
course of the present government at rose. I heard the Prime Minister purposes. I take it, Sir that when i to save thee,—,1r. 30;11.
Ottawa on domestic affairs has been speak in my own county, in a grove heard the Prme Minister in that
inerked by inefficiency and drift. at Exeter, when the Minister of Pub- grove at Exeter declare that he 1=1
Inrtfficiency and drift. Those are lie Works (Mr. Elliot) was with him. would reform the senate, either he FRIDAY.
el Mr S eaker They I heard him make just as go d
--°- a meant what he said or he did not. Repent ye, and believe in the Gos-
W. E. Watson, for some years
past an official of the Departments:
of Colonization and Aterieelture of
the Canadian National Railways
and one of the best known live-
stock men in Western Canada has
been appointed mulager of the
Montreal Stock Yards at Point
St. Charles, succeeding, Mr. D. J.
Tansey, who has resigned.
Mr. Watson is a native of Grey
County, Ontario, hut has seem
many years in Weetern Canada
where his most repent position we;
that of Superintendent of Farm
Employment for the Canadian
National Railways at Winnipeg.
Non..lury Assizes.
Non -jury assizes will he' held at
; Goderich, on lTuesday, April 16th,
with Mr. Justiee Kelly presiding. It
tie expected that the docket will be a
rather lengthy one,
lagr-LOOK AT YOUR LABEL
It is corroborated by every other his-
,
Lore- that will be found in the public
liOrariee of Canada:
(1) The Tories, the remnant of
the Family Compact, let by Sir Allan
MacNab.
(2) Moderate Tories, calling them
telves Conservaeivee, under the ris-
ing star of Maedona •
house, and he had an example before country what eonetruction can they SATURDAY.
MEDICINE FOR
(3) The moderate Liberale under
liiin—I think he must have been a put upon the future pledges of thie Good and upright is the Lord:
I
lieves in teaching by example. He pledge like this one? therefore will he teach S111110114 in the
' teacher at one time, because he be- man so ;solemnly given and broken, a
y 0 u 3,4 G m Ls lat on roc bi,,,,,tsfioni.;!:,. gwointh, littfflo 141114StIrlel: anCiglai;(1nseigernfhaV'hCti:11tiricn tili
IH•11 way.—Psa. 25:8.
ward, and after the Prime Minister same way at Exeter, the Prime Min -
had said, 'I have appointed this men ieter (mid that he had been handicap- of Canada. So far as Ontario is con-
! 1
others Endorse Lydia E. Pirm- with strings to him, and I can pull ped by lack of a majority behind cerned, faun imp c " 110
Hineks, who formed the largeet single r e v
group.
(4) The "Clear Grits," whose
moderate Liberate and moderate Con
bano's Vegetable Compound i them at any time, He must support him in the house. He had in the back cheaper to -day than the day 071
1 any legislation that I may propose of his head some great beneficient which the Prime Minister made that
old 'ilaaghter took I,ydia E. ',inkhorn's I is correct. I was appointed under of th' • people of We country but he would reduce the cost of living for
Ile also said that be
— , for the reform of the senate," this and benign legislation for the good etatement
vegetable Compound for weakness I those conditions." A fine way for tie did not have the neeessury majority the orminon people. Yet ie ' .. • •
Sydney, N. S. --"My seventeen year Isenator got up and Kiel, "Yes, that
reach with the other eels as she was l are supposed to sit as judges in the tion, and he pleaded with the people that the cost of living is higher to-
legisla- of Labour (Mr. Heenan) tells ue
who to crystallize his ideas into
;land, to be anpointed, that when all through that campaign to send dav than it was then. But I am not
and pains. She could not go about i members of the other chamber,
and it did her a great turn. Sh els work- . eilant.), him back with a stronger following going to take up further time to
ine out now in a storeaana warlks three !obey his order. Right is this house
pulls the strings" they will in the house, or he would refuse to enumerate further promises which
eat strong eimierh. We got six bottles
e'
-':in
-,i."
back 111 the in 1924 the Prime Minister made a to
carry on. Well, Mr. Speaker, he went this government has broken. This
{characteristic gr the country with 117 members be- adminietration is long on promises
Lingari Road, Sydney, N. S. tererseene gesture in hind him and he came back with 101 and short on performance. ,
told the country prior to the opening members, and still he hung on, not- The Prime Minister said this atter-
Pinewood, Ont. -"I constantly bad of the session that the government withstanding that he was defeated ;• noon that the government has done a
I regard to reforming the senate, He
pains in my back and side and spent he tried to direct the government of great deal for the farmers of Can -
tee days in bed every month. I have 'were considering legislation looking this Dominion from the galleries, and ada. I have prepared II little budget
,'t -'n three boxes of Lydia la. Pink- to a eurtailment of the eenate. He
Butt the government were anxious thought that I should not enter the for a 1(10 acre farmer in my censtit-
hem'e Ve;etable Compound Tablets, house beetles° I did not have a per- mince,. He does not agree with me
',hey have done inc good and I always I that the eountry should be convinced manent leader at the time of 'my politically, hut he has a good 100
limended your good metdicine to several the :Wee -Vann of parliament. Ile as- Those we te tw of theneres of land, and that land with the
eve them in the house, I have recom- of the necessity before pressine- it on election.
friends and have given it to my 17 -tired the Hwhich the Prime Minister m
House of Commons : promisos imnlements end the; stock .On it aro
ettar-old girl."-- Ma. Auntie QUE.. ade, He "Ned at about $10,000. I submit -
e,
LLITS, Pinewood y %enteric,.
2 desire to mute the house .that also Raid that he wotild lower the cost ted this little budget which I proper -
early leaders had been William Lyon
MacKenzie and DT„ John Roll*, two
of the rebel:, of 1837, but who now
aeknowledee the leaderehip ef Mr.
George Brown, editor of the TorontoG1ob.
Globe. Brown ( 1818-1 k Fin ) ism a
young Scotehman, who had C01711, ont
in 1843. rind who gave his tirelees
energy to fightine what 1-- ennsider
ed abuse, The Grite ',vete tne ant1-
1 mtivilege men; they saw that the
21013100Catholie Chureh had certein
privileges, and attacked them; they
saw that the seignior( had certain
privilertee, end deenueced them. For
the same 1.1'104011tatty denounce,I the
(dery reserves awl separate schnole.
in Lower r 'zInatlp. ( -I ) the n-callea
'Libeled', 1(11(11' Morin and (6) llie
"Perti Rouge", or
limier C"Reds".
Inanaan,
, now that r,,pon
qfhh. onvernownt had becomr• an ma
tehlished fart. the differenee brttweert
when parliament reassembles steps o farm ri t the farmers (Continued on Page 4)
t