HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1932-06-02, Page 7THURSDAY, JUNE 2, 1932.
TATE, GOLDEN.
TREASURY
June 5th.
+ r.
lH'aving the understanding darkened,
beingalienated from the life of God,
through the ignorance that is in them,
heca'tiee of the 'blind'ness of their
heart,, who, (being past feeling; have
given themselves over unto lascivious
gess, ;to work x91 tuuleannees' with
greediteess, Eph. iv. 118, 119,
If a man Ibe naturally dead, though'
'the stuff shine in his face, be sees not
its splen'donr, uior feels its warmth,
Offer him rich ,presents, he receives
thenrnot; he has no eye to 'see thein,
no heart to desire them, no hand to
;;grasp them. (Thus it is with one that
is sp'itii;tually .dead; 'let the sunshine ,of
the gospel blaze out ever so ;clearly, he
sees it not, because he is in darkness;
though he live under plentiful means,
.,and rich dispensations, yet he is ;blind
..and poor; offer'hini the rich pearls of
-the gospel, the rich treasures' of grace
in :Christ' Jesus, yet he has no heart for
•them, no hand, of faith to lay hold up_
FARIVI FOR SALE
Lot 11, Concession 4, H,1R.S, Tuck-
'•ersmith, containing 100 acres of choice
land, situated on county road, 154
verifies south of the prosperous Town
„of Seaforth, on C.N:R.; convenient to
-schools, churches and markets. This
-farm is all underdrained, well fenced;
,about 2 acres of choice fruit trees.
The soil is excellent and in a good
-state of cuieevation and all suitable for
-the growth of alfalfa, no waste land.
1The farm is well watered .with two
never failing 'wells, also a flowing
spring in She farm yard; about 40
acres plowed and reading for spring
seeding, also 12 acres of fall wheat;
remainder is •seeded with alfalfa. The
buildings are first class, in excellent
repair; the house is brick and is mo-
dern in every respect, heated with fur-
nace, hard and soft water on tap, a
-three-piece bathroom; rural telephone,
.also rural mail. The outbuildings con-
aist of barn 50x80 feet with stone
.stabling under; ail floors in stable
cement; the stabling has water sys-
• Sem installed. A good frame driving
e-ahed, 24x48 feet; a 2 -storey henhouse
'16x36 feet. A brick pig pen with ce-
rment floors capable, of housing about
40 pigs. The house, stables and barn
!'have hydro installed, Anyone desir-
eing a first class home and choice farm
'should sae this. On account of ill
'health I will sell reasonable. Besides
the above I am offering lot, 27, con-
cession 12, Hibbert, consisting of 100
aacres choice Land, 65 acres well•under-
refrained; 10 acres maple bush, all seed -
e ed to grass; no waste land. On the
premisesare a good bank barn 48x56
'•feet and frame house, an excellent
•well. The farm is situated about 5
-miles from the prosperous village of
•Hensall on the C.N.'R,, one-quarter of
•a mile from school and mile from
church. This farm has never been
,cropped much and is in excellent
-shape for croppingor pasture. I will
••setl these farms together or separate-
ly to suit purchaser. For further par-
•ticulars apply tp the proprietor, Sea-
• forth, R.R. 4, or phone 21 -: on 133,
Seaforth: THOS. G. SHff LIINIG-
LAIW, Proprietor.
D. H. Mclnnes
Chiropractor
Of. Wingham, will be at the
Commercial Hotel, Seaforth
Monday, Wednesday and
Friday ' Afternoons
Diseases of all kinds 'success
fully treated.
Electricity used.
on them; so blind, stupid, and sense-
less is he, •that, though these rich
treasures, these" graces, these pearls
of. the ;gospels; be conveyed mato ' him
in earthen vessels, in a plain and fam-
iliar meaner, yet he does not, he can-
not, apprehend them; judgments do
not affright him, and mercies cannot
allure and persuade him: in the mean-
time, this creature is all life in: the el-
ement of sin; he loves it, he pleads for
it, he \comm'itsit with greediness. This
is'St. Paul's account of the uncoe-
verted Gentiles, and 'holw many such
have we under a Christian u,atiiel
On the Psalms—iPsalm' 18,`
. 39. For thou hast . subdued under
those that rose up against me. 40.
Thou hast also given Ime the nectcs of
Mine enemies; .that I might destroy
them that hate me.
'With the ,almighty power of the
(Godhead ,was ,Jesus invested, by which
all enemies were subdued unto him;
the stiff "necks,' 'of his crucirfiers were
bowed .under hian, and utter destruc-
tion betaine ,the portion of those who
halted him, and had "sent -after him,
saying, We will net 'have this man to
"reign over us." So gird as, thy sold-
iers and servants, 0 Lord Jesus, to
the battle, ,and subdue under • us, by
the power of thy grace, those that rise
upagainst us, ,whether' they be our
own corrupt desires, or ,the malicious
spirits of darkness; so give us, like
another, Joshua, the "necks" ;of these
our "enemies, that we maty destroy
them that hate, and would destroy us..
41. They cried; but there was none
to save them; even to the Lord, but
be'answered them not. •
Never was there a more just and
lively portrait of the lamentable and
desperate state of the Jews, when
their calamities came . upon " them,—
'They cried, lbtet-none -to save!".
They had rejected him who. alone
could save, and who was now to des-
troy -them. They cried to Jehovah, and
thought themselves still his favorite
nation; but Jehovah and Jesus were
one; so that after putting the latter
from them, they could not retain the
former on their side. Me answered
them not!" It was too late to knock
when the door was shut; too late to
cry for mercy, when it was the time
of justice. Let us knock while yet
the door :may 'be opened; and not .be-
gin to pray when prayer shall be no
longer heard,
42. Then did I. heat then smolt as
the dust !before the wind, I did cast
them out as.t'he dint in the streets.
The nature of that judgment which
was executed upon the Jews, cannot
be more accurately delineated,. than
by the two images here made use ,of
They were broken in pieces and dis-
persed over the face of the earth by
!bhebreath' of 'G'od's displeasure, like
"dust before the wind; and as dirt
in the streets, they were .cast, out,"
to "bp trodden •under foot by 'all na-
tions.'O that every nation would so
consider, as to avoid their crime and
Their punishment!
43. Thoitphas delivered the .froin the
strivings of the people; and thou hast
made' me the head :of the heathen: a
people whom I have not known shall
serve me.
If David was delivered from the
strivings of the people; if the .adjace
ent heathen nations were added to his
kingdom, and a "people, whom he.
had not known, served him;"- how•
much more was this the case' of the
San of David, when he was "deliver-
ed," by his resurrection, from the
power ofall, his enemies; when he was
made "head of the heathen," of whom
aftertheir conversion, his church was,
and, to this day, is composed; and
when, instead' of the rejected Jews a
people, to whom before he 'had' net
been known, (became his servants I
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TIZESEAFORT}I NEWS.
PAGE SEVEN
PIONEERS MEET AFTER HALF CENTURY
r
alfa century is a long .way to
look back and when Charlie
Shaw (right) met Tom Wilson in
the grounds of the Banff Springs
Hotel last autumn, it was an
occasion for both of them. Tom is
a well-knowrr character at the
famous Rocky Mountain resort,
I -Te is the sole survivor of the
Canadian Pacific's first exploration
tarty of 1881, and was the first
white man to see Lake Louise.
Shaw, who makes ' his home in
Keremos, B.C., is the sole survivor
of the survey party under C. E:
Perry, C E.,••whi h located the fine
across the Alberti. prairies. The
pair r.•et, for the only time in their.
lives till 1931, in 1883, when Tom
was working under Major A. B.
Rogers, after whom Rogers Pass
is named and Charlie was with Sir
Sanford Fleming's memorable ex-
pedition through the $icking
Horse Pass. What this gallant pair
of veterans must havehad to say
to each other when they renewed
their acquaintance! . From the
days when they toiled over moun-
tain and plain, blazing the way for
the great steel girdle which now
binds the provinces of the Domi-
nion together, down to the present.
day, is history. Their cheery de-
termination has been, and is,
relected in the story of the world's
greatest transportation system.
The mantle of responsibility bas
passed from Mountstephen to
Van Horne
and from
Shaughnessy
to the broad
shoulders of
E.W.Beatty,
chairman
and presi-
dent of the
system. Many progressive im-
provements have been. made.
But the spirit which sent Tom and
Charlie across hundreds of miles of
unexplored territory, remains un-
changed, for the excellent reason
that none better can be found.
•
TH E THREE AMERICA'S.
There are three Americas: The Am-
erica af tike North; the- America of the
Middle Region,asd the America of the
South. ' They differ in psohology, in
language and in 'temperament, but
there is a basic unity among them.
They are bound together Iby a com-
mon pioneering spirit that basically
distinguishes the 'New World from
the Ceed; that dares everything, flaunits
•tradition and attempts the impossible.
Out of that spirit has came the great
contribution of the Americas to world
civilization,
North America throbs_ with its in-
dustries; scrapes the very skies with
its buildings; eliminates distance,
height, depth; educates its youth• by
the thousands, sends abroad its' goads
and its moral concepts. This is the
!America ief John Dewey, "philosopher
of an industrial age; of Walt Whit-
man, poet of the unconvention:al; of
New York City and df a Niagara' that
is the symbol of the nation—power-
ful and producing power.
!Middle America lives amid the ruins
of 'gl'orious ancient civilizations, un-
der a torrid sun-. Here the new and
the old mingle. Here the sugar cane,
the banana amid the coffee tree color
the countryside and ;provide a liveli-
hood for millions of workers.' IH-e:re
oil and canals and khaki uniforms
bring their problems and alter the
physical and political aspects of the
land. These repu-blics of the Middle
America are the first to feel the. ex-
Pension.- of -their neighbor of the
North. Out of this has come a fever-
ish activity in nation building; artists
turn statesmen and school teachers
take up the reins af State.
This is the America of Ruben Da-
rio, foremost among the world's
poets; of Diego Rivera, painter of liv-
ing murals; of Marti, the poet -mar-
tyr; of great plantations and of great
capitals like Havana and Mexico
City; of peoples who, like those of the
North, have ,deep faith in their des-
tiny.
South America, with its ten na-
tions, resembles, in part, the 'A'merica
of the North; 10 part the America of
the Middle Region. '-fere people live
near dense tropical jungles' or high in
the rarefied atmosphere, and also in
the big andbustling cities of the
coast: Here are wheat and cattle
and, oil and coffee :for all the world.
Here too the old and the new meet
-the ox -cart and the airplane; not
far from such metropolises as 'Buenos
\Aires and Rio ds Janiero are towns
that seem a century away. I-Iere are
banks and railroads, factories and sub-
ways and also large landed estates.
'This is the America of Jose Santos
tC'hbcano, the poet of Pertt, of Agustin
!.Alvarez of Chile, world -(famous for
his knowledge of international law;
of Carlos Gomez, composer of op -
i nieln-
eras•, of ,Domingo 'Faustina .Sar
g
to, the 'educator -statesman' of Argen-
tina, and of many other fate& in the
•arid
of .thought. Some of the nations
of 'South America' are .foraned and
others are still in the' making; but all
of them(: are wt•estling' courageously
with their problems, •
I'Ijhese, then; are three Americas,
different' in and yet alike in their vital-
ity, in their dynamic power, in their
ideabi gni. The American of the North
is calm, efficient, practical; with his
instruments of steel he pushes
through forests, over or under rivers,
in -to the earth and into the very skies,
The man of Central and South'Amer-
ica .is emotional and brilliant of i!utel-
teeit with pen and •word he tilts with
ignorance, with 'blind' conservatism,
.with social injustice. Yet they have
fought the same battles; both have
contended with the jungle and have
striven in the world of the spirit.
One significant feature of American
civilization has been the ' conquest of
nature, and the tnastery of euviron-
ni'ental obstacles to human ;life and
happiness. North America is consid-
ered the classical example of the com-
plete victory of man over his sur-
roundings. Man in the North ,has
overcome the rigors of the climate
and virtually eliminated distance as
a barrier to civilization. He has knit
together North and South, East and
West and established a uniform cul-
ture in all parts of 'lois domain. With
many more obstacles to overcome,
the Central and 'South Americans, too,
have made a remarkable record. iTheir
task ie not yet- complete, .but in the
light of their past achievements they
Seem destinedto succeed.
It was not the 'Spaniards and the
Portugese alane who won these vic-
tories over nature. .Among the 'con-
querors were nen of mixed blood--•
the true !Latin Americans -who took
part in, and often led, those remark-
able achievements of expansion that
brought most of America to the
knowiledge of the world. They =pene-
trated into every. corner; they crossed
wide rivers and high mountains; they
fought wild beasts and hostile Ind -
They gasped .for breath in high
altitudes, and paused for relief in lat-
itudes thiat were unbearably hot, But
noticing stopped them.
!There are, for example, the 'Paelista
of 'Brazil, who thatched the perform-
ance af the and the'Forty-
Niners," 'These IBan•deirantes—desc-
endants of \Negro and ,Portugese—
',fought all the horrors of the "green
hell" •with the fury of tigers. Starting
Eronii the present ,State of Sao Paulo
with 'their families, possessions and
caravans and' determined to succeed.
or succumb, they plunged into the
brush and jungle. They spread Nest
and North and 'South:' and the enor-
mous !Brazil of today is their work.
'This !pioneering spirit' has shown it-
self in ether 'fields where even more
courage was required All three Am-
ericas have made challenging contri-
butions to civilization by putting into
practic new principles of liberty, 'bro-
therhood and peace. They .have .dem
oustrated how society can be organiz-
ed 'on
rganiz-ed''on 'the basis of equality, •how the
people .can participate iii government
and 'hew nations can settle their dif-
ficulties,without .resort to arms.
'Demacre cy,;which -is now accepted
E
"as the n'brmal..and natural form o,
govennme'!ut," ha.s been pre-eminently
a gift of the
north Am
erie
on to
the
world. But it is doubtful whether the
Americas alone could have fixed
universal ,attention upon the great ad-
vantages of ,'democracy. Some 'Euro-
pean nations tried' it but despaired and
slipped back into the old ways. 'The
Latin 'Americans alone struggled on.
Tn spite of repeated failures and " in
the -'fate of treme,ndous :obstacles, they
have cdnmg tenaciously to their con-
stibultions as the source of demooracy
and individual liberty.
The second great contribution Of
the Americas to civilization has been
the practice of anbitraticn. "America
has been the pioneer of the view that
peace is the norma( condition of man-
kind arid' that when the causes for war
are eliminated, war ceases to have a
raison d'etre," says a distinguished
British writer- 1A large part of the
world now concurs in this belief, but
long `before it became au internation-
ally accepted ideal, the Latin \Amer-
ican's were patting it into operation.
One of the most fnuitful causes of
war lay in 'boundary disputes, because
territorial integrity and national hon-
or were considered almost synony-
mous. To violate the one was to im-
pugn the other, and the offense could
only be washed clean on the 'field of
battle. The Latin-American' nations
all inherited territorial disputes with
their neighbors. Though some wars
were fought over these doubtful .boun-
daries, most of the questions at issue
were settled by arbitration,
There is a dovlble significance in
this 'fact. It 'shows not only the desire,
of the Latin (Americans for peace, but
also that they are not revolutionaries
:because of any constitutional love of
fighting. Wars aver boundaries were
considered justifiable, but consonant
with the spirit of the New World and
!with their own idealism the Latin
'Americans chose the path of peace.
Their faith in arbitration has found
its fullest justification in .treaties for
compulsory atbitration, pacts to re -
!flounce war, the Geneva protocol, the
lLoicarno treaty, the League of Na-
tions and .the 'Pan-American confer
ences.
!Complete in itself, Mother Graves'.
Warm Extteeminator does not require.
the assistance of any other medicine
to make it effective. It does not fain
to do its work. Let
More reccutly the nations of the
South have become political pathfind-
ers in the New °World. Mexico's Con-
stitution of 1.9117, a great' social -docu-
ment;'Ueuguay's'Coostitutibn of 1919,
in which the convettHone] executive
power 'has been altered to a novel
form; the Peruvian ,Constitution of
10, and those of (Honduras' and Ecu
ador with ; their sections on social
guarantees; the new _legislation of Me-
xico and (Chile—all ; indicate that' the
Latin Americans • recognize re'alistic-
ally Vhe existence 03 great humanita-
rian problems and their willingness to
alter fuuldamentail :la'ws'to solve them.
There has been still another signi-
ficant contribution of Che Americas of,
the v,onld.RRacial bitterness, class pre-
judice and religious intolerance have
been among the great barriers to hu -
,man happiness, 'Because they are
founded on emotional basis, they are
all the more difficult to dissipate."
North America has shown ;how class.
and religious differences can be over-
come; it has revealed the efficacy of
the "melting pot." The Latin IIAmeri
can, far his part, has added social to
economic and political equality. Ever
since the beginning of Lathe -American
history an amazing blending of bloods
and cultures has been going on. Afri-
can, Indian -acrd •European civilizations
thousands of years apart as measured
in, time, have been superimposed or
fused, While the fusing is taking
place, as it still is today, friction is
produced. Much of .elle unrest of Lat-
in America originates it this racial
laboratory. But all these are growing.
pains and the promises of nation -
building go on, unceasingly.
Steadily the links binding the three
Americas -together have been forged --
links of communication, of trade, of.
international accord end of spirit. Un-
til the World War the channels of in-
tercourse were inferior to those with
Europe. Today, through the air, on
land and sea, and under the sea, the
three Americas have been brought in. -
to touch.
Persian Balm -the delight of dain-
ty femininity. Imparts a fragrant
charm to the complexion.. Tanee up
the skin' and makes it e'elvety soft in
texture. Cooling, refreshing, it is'de-
i-ightful to use, Never leaves a vest-
ige of stickiness. Inv+alua:ble' for hands
face, and as 'a hair fixativev. Wonder -
frilly soothing and protective.- Especi-
ally reconnuended in cases of :rough-
nese or chafing caused byweather
conditions.
Blood Tested Chicks
Hatchery and flocks are both in-
spected under the Dominion Depart-
ment of Agriculture's Hatchery Ap.
provai policy, The testing of • the
bfood samples was done by Capital
Laboratories, Ottawa. The bred -to -
lay qualities of our birds are kept up-
to-date by the purchase ofmale birds
front high record R.O.P..hens owned
by some of the most successful breed-
ers in the country..
We expect to hatch about 1500
Barred Rocks, 250 White Rocks and
500 Leghorns per week. Please order
about one month before you want the
chicks if you can, Don't think too
much about price; we will use you
right,
Come and see us, or phone 97 r 4,
Hensall.. Vire will be glad to talk
things over with you. Feed, stoves,.
and other supplies kept on 'hand,'
J. ELGIN McKI,N'LEY, ZURICH
have the names of your visitors
�a
ass
ra
We, can give you prompt and satisfactory service at a moderate
price in the fallowing lines of printing:—
Letterheads
Envelopes
Statements..
Bill -heads.
Private Cheques
Circulars
Tags
Cards
Tickets
Sale Bills
Dodgers
1Vfenns
Factory Forms
Society Stationery.
Blotters
Booklets
Business Cards
Visiting Cards
Wedding Station-
ery
tation
e
r
,
Y
Invitations
The (Yews has an np-to•date commercial printing plant and we
are•equipped to turn out all classes of job work. Give us a call.,
We have a new automatic press with great speed, recently
installed to produce printing, well done, with •speed,' and at mod-
erate cost...
TIIE ,$1nFoRrri DEWS
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