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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1932-10-13, Page 7J, ;1 1r1HURSDIAY, O'CT'OIB'ER 13, 1932. 'THE SEAFORTH NEWS. TG.�.E1� STJ,Y October 16. FIaw lqug shall a lake counsel in my 'Sohl, having sorrow in any heart Tidily? Psalm xiii. 2. Be careful for GO thing; but, in everything, 'by' prayer " and suppillcati'oto • with thayil.sgiviiinig, let your requests be .made known unto God, Phil.. iv. 6, !Commit thy way ante the Lord; 'tr'ust also in Mini, and he shall sus- tain thee; he sh'a:ll, newer suffer the ri'glht'eo'us to be moved, Psalm iv. 22. He 'hath done 'wo'tnder•Eul things; his. ,counsels, of old are faithlfitln'e's's and truth. Isla. xxv, 1. "Be careful for nothing," is a wall against a thousand troubles, It, on the other hand, we give way to care nidi ualbe1ie.f, they will s'pr'e'a'd' their mischievous effects through all our a'ctio'ns, Therefore we ought, while 1procesud,i'ng our lawful engagements, to rely, in all th'in'gs, ,on the good pro- v'iden'ce and faithfulness of !God; firm - 2y believing thlat he will, never fail to ,carry u!s.'thraugh, the most difficult and intricate 'cimcu'msbam'ces, though there should be ever so l'ittl'e .pro'b'abil- 1'ty in our own eyes. IPhou ar.t my strength, ,my life, my ;stay, lAs'si'sit my feeble trust; Drive these distressing fears away, Pied raise me from the dust. 0 let .me call thy grlace to mind, And trust thy glorious, name: • J;eh!o'vah, p:o'averiul, wise and kind, !For ever is the 'same. !Here let me rest, on thee depend, My God, my h'otpe, my all; !Be thou my ev'erlas'ting friend, 'And' S can never fall. Psalm XXII. IL 'My God, my 'Grad, why 'hast thou ;forsaken me? Why art thou 'so 'far from helping me, .and from the words of my ,roaring? !Christ, the Ibeloved Sion of the Fath- rer, .when hanging on the cross, co'm- -pleined in these word's, that he was ;deprived, for a'ti'me, of the divine'pre- sence and comforting in'fluen'ce, 'while he suffered for our sins. If the Master thus underwent the triad 'of a 'spiritual desertion, .why Broth the disciple think it D. Ha McInnes ehiropractor Of Wingham, will be at the Commercial Hotel, Seaforth Monday, Wednesday and Friday Afternoons Diseases of all kinds success- fully treated. Electricity used. •tt strange, ;furless the light.'' 'OE: heaven'' shine contin}sa6ly upoat his tabe)n'aele?, "Leet us comfort ourselves, in such cir- cumstances, with 'the thought, ,that we. pie ',therelby conformed to :the image of our dying Cord, "that Suin, which set in a cloud,',to auise,:without one, 2, 10 my God, I icry in the day ,time, but thou he'arest !sot; and 'in -!the night season, 'aid 'am noit 'silent. (Even our !Lord himself, as man, .prayed, "that if it were possible 'the,, !cup might pass Ilnom him;" 'hut Goa had ordained. 'otherwise, ,for this owii ,glory, andfor man's salvation. 'Day and night," in prosperity and 'ed'v'ersi- 'ty, living and dying, ,let •us no.t'be "si-. lent," but cry for 'dell'ive'riance: always rtmlentlbering to. (add, as !Christ did, "Neverfheles's, not ..my !will, 'but thine be done." .Nor let way Mn be impa- tientfore the return of 'his prayers, Is•ince every petition ,preferred even by the Son of God ;himself was not grant '3. lBu't thou art hialy,'0 thou that in- !ha!brteat the praise's of !Its,rael, Whatever 'befafleth'the members of thie church, The Head 'thereof here teaches them bo Confess the j'us'tice and 'holiness of IG!od'in all his pro- ceedings; and to acknoiwledge, that •w'hethe'r' he exaite'th or ,hu'm'blefh his pieolplle, he is to be !praised and glori- fied by'fhem, 4. Our 'fathers trusted in thee; they trusted, and thou didis't deliver them. "Trust" in .God, is the 'way to "de- liverance;" sand !the 'former instances of the d'ivi'ne 'favour ere So many ar- gu'ments .why we should hope for the same; but it may, not always be vouc'h- safe'd, 'wheel we 'expect it. The patri- archs and,llsrael'i'tes of odd were ofte]. saved from their enemies: the holy tferau's is lett to .languish 'and lexp'ire under the malice of his. God knows what is proper for him to do, and !for us to .suffer; .we kn'o'w neither. This consideration is an anchor for t'he ilicted soul, .su'r'e and stead'fa'st. 5. They cried' unto 'thee, and were del'ivere'd; they trusted in thee, and were .not ,domfound''ed. INo argumenit is of more force with God, than that 'which is ,founded upon an apipeal to 'hi's darling attribute of mercy, and to the rtnanilfes'tation of 11 formerly m'ad'e to person's in distress; for which .reason it is here repeated, .and dwelt upo411 They who would ob- tain grace to 'hle'l'p, in time of need, must "cry" 'as well as "trust." The "prayer Of faith" is •niighty with 'Gad, and •overcometh the Omnipotent. !6. But I am a ,worm, and no man: a reproach Of men, and d'es'pised by .rhe people. He Who spareth all o'th'er men, spar- ed not his awn Sion; 'he spared' not him, that he might spare them, The 'Red'ee'mer 'of the world eerupleth not to c'om'pare himself, in 'his state of hu- miliation, to .the tolwest re'ptil'e which his : own hand formed, a "worm," h'utnble, si'len't, innocent, overlooked, oppre'sls'ed.,and 'trodden under foot. ;Let the sight of this reptile teach tis huin- 7, S. All they that see .me, la'ug'h •me to scorn;,they s'h'o!o't out the lip, they sh'alce the head, saying, He trusted on tilt Lord,' ,that 'he'w'oudd deliver him: lest 'him deliver him, seeing 'he : de- lighted hi him.. This was literally fulfilled, when Messiah hung upon the cross, and the priests 'add elders' used the very ,wands; thud had been .pat into Their mouths, by the spirit of 'prop'h'ecy, sb tong before. 'M'att. xxvii, 411 -43. -"'Tine chief priests Mocking h+i'tii, with -t'he scribes !and elder's, said, iIle 'trusted' lin Cod; let hila• deliver him now if he will have him." T bis 'wisdom and foreknowledge .Of � !God ! I'.i'he infatuation amt .b•Iin'dness of man '1 IThe same are too often the sentiments of those, who live in times, when the 'church and her righteous cau'se, .with ,their 'adPoc'ates, are under THE 'GARDEN. 'The ,Pansy.—,Although the pat sy, botanically, is a viola, Viola trieod'or, a distinction between the pansies and other members of t'he genus is Marie,, the pansy being characterised 'by its greater sized blooms ailth'ough in. col- oring it isdifficult to determine where h viola ends and a pansy starts, es- pecially in the halfway hybrid's known as tutted pansies, which in some cases have been devel'o'ped' .to pansy size. Vie tufted pansies have the ad'van,- tage :over the ,pansy in their greeter hardiness and greater pra'fusionr of bloom, the tuft 'par't oans'isting of a grealt number of stems springing from the blase of the pliant after its first bloom's 'from seed to replen'fslh the supply. The old stem's should be cut back when, t'hey grow a little straggly and the tufting proces's will make nice neat compact bus'hes, Rock gard'en'ers have been respons- ible for the develop'menit of many viola types. Viola 'bose iaca, a crimson 'type or a clear magenta, is one o'f these. Itis a species and ' comes true fro nnseed and is a brilliant bit of' col- or. It now has 'hylbrid founts. !One of the daintiest and moist grace- ful of the violas is viola gnacil'is, which has also been hybridized into a nu'm- .-..V..-.-o- Clip this coupon and mail it with $1 for a six weeks' trial subscription to THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR Published b' Tag Mrsssas ScIENCEetts, IIP Barssnala seems In it you will and the dally good news of the world from its gee special writers, as well as departments devoted to women's and children's interests, sports. music, (mance, education, radio, etc You will be glad to welcome into your home so undies Go advocate ere of peace andfeap prohibition. And don't miss Snubs, Our Dog, Tae OHntSTIAN Somme 110oxtwit, Back Bay Station, Boston, Mass. Please send me. a six weeks' trial subscription. I enclose ono dollar (51). A DOLLAR'S WORTH (Name, Dlrase print) 0 (state) r"., - (Town) (Address).. • $6.50 ROUND TRIP between BUFFALO and CLEVELAND • Autos, any size, earriodfor only+63.75 ($4.75 July zst to Sept. sob inclusive) Why drive when you can put your car aboard for less than the cost of oil and gas? More restful. cheaper... and'saves a day. Steamers each way, every night, !caviar; at 9:00 P.M., Sexay 15th to November est Cleveland -Pt. Stanley, Canada,Division July 1st to Sept. 5th incl. on Friday, Satur- dayand Sunday only' 03.00 omte avian. $5.00 Rd. Trip. Any ear only 03.75. Ask yser Leval Tourist or Tirkat Agent for new 0 & B Lipe Folder, indhdrasFree Auto. Map and details alt our All Worse l'nya TUE CLEVELAND AND MEF e1ALO TRANSIT CO}NPANY. Port Stanley,. Canada • Buffalo: N. y. 1. R t.y. p e 're T•n•,,•y i2'1'i +, ('annela in 1''dl . ll ed I uuunds. Vli.lh•d al ) 2 ..;• , I. i nuey is pi cubed C,,.,,vcrr,.'lly i.r all the pruvinees 01 1, Registering rn 1 ,,,ude ivo ad- vance in prices ever tecent years the first batch of Nova Scotia apples in the Liverpool market brought gds to 255 per barrel as compared alt!, ns to 15s in 1931. Great improver'' i,I and develop- ment over 0 puuud of 30 years hasbeen noted in the Canadian' seed industry. Last year 3710 seed farms t"•lth 73 u00 persons occupied In the production and moi'i,•rm^ '••• •-•,vert „ed were • ,..e the industry. Preliminary returns of maple sugar production in Canada just completed for 1932 show a total yield of 1,744,479 gallons of maple syrup valued at $2.034,277 and 7,217,300 pounds of sugar valued at 0692,410. This production com- pares favorably with that of for. mer years. Cutting of wheat is nearing completion and threshing is well advanced in all the Prairie Pro- vinces, with Manitoba leading, ac- cording to a report from the agri- cultural department of the Cana- dian Pacific Railway, western lines, dated September 10. Oats and barley at that date were 76 per cent. cut. Liza Commanda, Chippeawa In- dian girl golf caddy at the Cana- dian Pacific French River Bun- galow, who came eighth in the women's marathon swim at Tor- onto, recently, has been present- , ed with a purse of $160. J. G. Strathdee, manager of the Camp, stated that she would be thor- oughly trained and would enter the contest annually until she Wheeling airplanes added a roaring farewell to the cheers with which passengers and well- wishers speeded Captain .7. A. Mollison on his return to Eng- land aboard the Empress of Brit-. ain as she sailed on her seventh departure of the 1932 season from Wolfe's Cove, Quebec. The in- trepid solo trans-Atlantic flyer was promised a quiet time on his trip by Captain Latta, commander of the Empress. "I am not running away, from the election. I am out of poli- tics and have no vote in the dis- trict of Columbia," ,Said Mrs. Woodrow Wilson, widow of the famous United States war -time President, interviewed at the Banff Springs Hotel recently, where she stopped en route to Tokio where she is attending the marriage of a family connection., Mrs. Wilson motored on to Cha- teau 'Lake Louise as part of her tour of the Canadian Rockies. "I have never seen a more beau - Wu! country or enjoyed a visit I', more," said Sir Philip Cunliffe Lister, British Secretary, -of -State for the Colonies, as he said fare- well to British Columbia when boarding the Canadian Pacific Imperial Limited' on his way to Calgary. He enjoyed his favor- ite sport, fishing, in that province,' where he and his party took four fine fish, including a 17 -pound salmon. (869)'. .toroff. rcolors, 'so'n e of ,them very' rich and velvety, Viola Haseiiner•e comes close 'to being pink and is a very pret- ty, sn1'aill .but profuse, flowering viola. Some very pretty blue 'forms often oc- cur among H'asel'niere seedl'i'ngs that are fully as fine as the type. • THE C.N.R. DEBT 1I0 the eight year interval between u1922 and 1930. 'the Canadian' National Railways absorbed three-quarters of a bilti'on dollars o'8 public money, The ,profit and loss account of the road' showed a deficit of $346,000,'000• and during this period four hu'n'dred 'mil lion ,dollars were spent in•the con'struic- tidn and acquisition of new railway iiin:es, for terminals, hotels, radio Sta- tions, ' telephones one trains and the like. Alth'ou'gh this lavish expenditure did not improve the earn! nng-powers of the road, it did result in adding to the already !tre'mend'ous burden of in- terest which annually has to he pro - by the Dominion exc'heque'r, The .outlay of three-quarters 'of• t 'bil'li'on dollars upon unprodu'cfive ba= 'cil'ities was us'h'ered in during the era of Sir Henry °Tho'rnt'on and a .hoard of directors appointed by Hon. W. L. M. !King. Likewise ,the exp.eaudi'ture of this colossal s'u'm was accom'plis'hed in the s'pa'ce of time which measured Mr. !Kin'g's' premiers'hi'p of .Canada. Exit of Mir. King and the Liberal party from power ended the orgy of ex'travaganice, in the -m'anvage'ment of the Canadian (Nati'on'al) Railway, but Premier Ben- nett and his government is prow faire`d with the heavy task of retrieving n'ances of the National system and the country itself from the. abyss .into which' the ex'pendi'tures of the former !Li'bera'l admin'istrati'on Nave •fonced the',m, 'With one 'brief in'terregntrm Hron, W. L. Mackenzie King , held office. from the end of 1901 to. August 6, 1930, and during the heyday Of his power it was customary, for, the sec= lion of the press which su'pp'orted him" to hail with delight annual announce m'erit's .by his ,finance ministers_ .that the debt af' Canada was 'being mater- ially reduced. A survey of .the -finances of Canada during this period' 'show's that instead of the ,financial .obliga— tions of the ,country going down; they were steadily rising as' a result of the ever-growing extpenditures on the Ca- nadian National Railway which were undertaken on money borrowed in New York, 'These obligations entered into on .beh'ailf of ,the Canad'i'an Nation- al Railways were backed by the Dom- inion of Canada with its guarantee uponevery one of them. The treasury of Canada is obligated to meet them If and when the Canadian ,National Rail- ways cannot, and the C.IN.R. has nerel• yet been able to meet them entirely. i Claims were made by the late Lib- eral administration that between 1922 and 1930 there were seven years in which the public;delb't of Canada was reduced. Statistics compiled by the Dbmiuian Bureau of Statis'ti'cs clearly show that this was not the case. From !11922 onward the total bonded debt' 0,f the country was .mounting year by year, although the .finance ministers of those days were ,careful not to tell the !publ•ic about it. 'They were presenting only a partial picture of the debt of the country in their annual financial statements. The finance• ministers during the regime of Mackenzie King showed re- ductions in the debt of Canada, but they carefully eafclu'ded the m'ountinig debt of the Canadian National Rail- ways which, as has been explained above, is guaranteed by the D'onlinion. To present the p oblli.c with the true story they. should have added to the purely national debt the Canadian Na- tional.Rai lway d'elblt. Only then would it have been; ,possible for the electors to know what was going 00. Of course, such .a policy would .have shown the public that instead of the total nation'al debt 'being- reduced it was increased. But this would not have been ad'van'tageous to the ,Liber- al politicians. A true financial statement would have included the C.INJR. debt and this would have shown that between 11922 and 1930 the guaraniteed debt of th'e Donii.n os' was i.ncr•ease'd instead at being reduced The in'crea'se am- ounted to $60M795,931, 931 which will ev- enitual'ly have to bemet out of the pockets of Canadian ,taxpayers. do the •face of this situation, it is not at all surprising that the Duff Coln - mission has reported to the present administr'at'ion that the very stabi'l'ity of the nation's credit is at stake and ,that i'mmedia'te measures must be ta- ken Co rec'tify the railway situation' which was all'ow'ed .to` drift into a 'clna- ati.e situation..under the .Liberal gov- ernunenit. To safeguard the child from dam - nee that worms cause, use Miller's Worm Powders, the medicine par ex- cellence for ,c'hildre'n. These Powders will clear the system- entirely of worms; will regulate ,and stimulate the organs injuriously affected 1by the worms, and will encourage 'healthful operation of the digestive processes.. As a vernri'fuge it cannot be surpassed in effectiveness. MEDIEVAL 1VIETH+O D'S. 'In the Tower of .5..ondon in Eng- land, there is .still an exhibition an instrument, or machine, which was used to extract con'fes'sions - t'he' greatest third-degree anachine:,lever seen. The victim's feet were .fasten- ed to one end of the"malchine,, his bands to the other, and by a system of cranking, ,'his 'body was gradual- ly pulled apart. 1tf 'he was asked, a question and refused to reply satis- factorily to it, the machine would be ,put in operation and gradually stret- ched his upper and tower limbs., This 'was continued until it became so painful that the victim usually con- fes'sed, whether innocent or guilty. In Many instances the tortures indicted u'p'on the prisoner were so severe that he frequently confessed to the crime he was charged with, atth'ough inno- cent of it. The third-degree . method of enforcing confessions from' psis= oners suspected of crime's is as 'old as the world. It was pr'actised' for Many hundreds of years before the birth of Cfpris't, and has con'tnOed dawn through the centuries ever s'in'ce. In ancient days; in Vienice;, ev' ery, known Method, sof :'torture. Weis-, used to extract con'kessioivs from the accused, and, whether innocent or gudlhy, he ?A�as• punislhedaocprd'iag fo-. th'e humor of the doge' who tried • hi -n} If the. asrused• had money,' all ;of int was taken from him, or_ one eas wbuid be, ordered. ,aev'ered, or a sentence of intpr'isdnment given in a dungeon un- derneath the palate. S'ometimes, in extreme raises, the accused would be !beheaded,' weights fastened to, his rb'ady and this slid from the dungeon into:the canal. The guilldtihe; and• the. door leading to_• the can'ah through which the dead bodies were slid are still 'in evidence. and may be seen by tourists. No matter where one ..travels, in any part of the world, there are always exhibited instruments of tor- ture which were used' to extract con- 'fes'sions froth the accused. It seems to be a 'mania w'•it'h some official's, es=' peoial'ly in Europe, to exhibit and ex- plain these 'various m'ach'ines of tor- ture. In Germany every place I weoet they insyste,d on showing me the ax used to !behead m'urd'erer..s and the. 'block to Which the murderer was s't'rapped to be 'beheaded. In France they delight in showing the guillotine. Where is no place in the world where the guillotine hes been used so fre- quently as there. Practically every execution in France is a public one, outside of the 'courthouse or prison. Anyone who rises early enough can witness a beheading. Parents of the lower type -'h'ot- tem'pered, sen'sele'ss fathers and mo- thers ---are •fn many cases the origina- tors of the passionate, infuriated third degree, in'flict'ing it upon their off- spring. The son is sus'pecited of un - 1 truthfulness or the torn s• of cnijne. 'He is; sulibnloited to a nogm a1�p'ne bY' the father,; wino, be ins hu3 ektia'mination`'bY .Slap�ping ,or punchtng '. the !boy in. "the face to taikc Mhe nerve out , of him. The 'laid. tgnfesses, VTos't tfinea.e is guilty, bu•t , sonle. ". times jnnaeen't, and confesses ,Ito avoid fuiifher thtlasfnin.g, ; 'h 't>fs civl6laatlan advances, t e t degree decreases. Not many, years ago, in the, larger police departments o'f the world prisoners .were^ abused and i.11 treated in the' effort to sscus'C confessions from 'them, In murder cases the a'uspeot was forced:' to re - Main for a long _Period in a room in the presence ,o'f ' the deceased; or blood ftiom the body of the' deceased or .plant of the clot'hin'g of the de- ceased was pat on or near the person accused in. the effort' to extract a confession, Various other .'kinds Of tor'tures WRerd resorted to. It was pot an unoom,mon occurrence with some offi!cialls in_•years gone by to endeavor to., procure co'nfess'ions by assaulting an'd abusin'g prisioners. This was par • - ticulariy' so in crimes of violence or where policemen or detectives were rnurder,ed, mortally wounded or as sauiked in the performance of their duty. These assaults upon prisoners 'have' been discontinued, 'be'aatese in ;many instances the :pnis'oners reveal- ed what transpired, and because ex- aminations to obtain confession's are now intelligently cond'u'cted. de the larger cities, if the prisoner has a pr.evlious crime record' it is soon disfavored from his finger prints by 1$ertillon measurements. Ity the morning he goes in a line-up and is placed on a stage in the presence of hundreds of masked detectives. The details of the crime are announced !The assembl'ed detectives are asked if any of them recognize the prisoner. Up goes a hand. The masked detec- tive tells what he knows about the 'prisoner. "Up goes another, and so on, until he is dis'posed of. Being under arrest is a mighty uncomfortable 'pos'i- tion to be in, especially if guilty of a crime. H'um'an nature is pretty sturdy, but a pair of steel 'bracelets remo'vus (a lot of the .romance frim the average criminal and have their peculiar effect on his nerve—i1 he is guilty. If inno- cent, it doesn't even faze him. A'sfhnla Brings ;Misery, but Dr. J. D, Kellogg's ,As'thm'a Remedy will re- place the misery with welcome relief. Inhaled as stroke or vapor it reaches the very innermost recesses of 'the bronchial passages and' soothes them. Restriction passes and easy breathing returns. II'f you knew as well how this remedy 'would help you as do thousands of grateful users, there would 'be a package in'your home to- night. Try it. Q hc cunt 'dla MEAW ELL /bign AP WReWN to eKa C � fn �4e e,oeK scans r.Ko isGNai'WWWJ y. s%YS.t,rtEVE/ VVP:ELSE00E5 (t rRILROADS. 1 —From the Cannbaa (Otto) ,.watch.• FAIR ENOUGH TO BOTH High Class Printing We can give you prompt and satisfactory service at a moderate price in the following lines of printing:—. Letterheads Envelopes Statements. Bill -heads. Private Cheques Circulars Tags Cards Tickets Sale Bills Dodgers Menus Factory Forms Society Stationery Blotters Booklets Business Cards Visiting Cards Wedding Station ery Invitations The News has an up-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. THE SEAFORTH DEWS