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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1933-08-03, Page 3THURSDAY, AUGUST 3, 1933 '. Services 'We Can Render In the time of need 'VIROT,ECTSO$ is your .best ff'iend. Life Insurance • —To ,protect your LOVED ON'E!S, Auto Insurance— To protect you against LI'ABII'UITY to PUBLIC and their PROPERTY Fire Insurance--•. 1 To protect your HOME and its CONTENT'S. Sickness and Accident ^-Insurance— To protect your INCOME Any of the above lines we can give you in strong and reliable companies, T interested, call or write, E. C. CHACiBERLAIN. INSURANCE AGENCY Phone 334 Seaforth, Ont Use Millers Worm Powders and 'the 'battle against worm's is won,. These powdens correct the morbid' condition of the sto'mach, which nour- ish the 'worms, and these destructive parasites cannot exist after they cone: in contact with the medicine. The ,worms are digested by the powders - and, are speedily evacuated with other refuse from tlie bowels. Soundness is imparted to ,the organ's and the health of the child steadily improves, Popular Stallions' SEASON 'OF 1933 The Handsome, 'Choicely Bred Clydesdale Stallion "FIUASIH.IOlN" 'No. (35022) (20'5'76)' Dmported Approved Form .I' 'Enrolment No. 2096 Monday noon will leave this .'n'wa stable lot 23, con. 5, Logan, and pro- ceed to Peter Hignell's, lot 14, con. 5, McKillop, for night. Tuesday To Jos. Flannigan's, lot 6, con. 7, Mtcleillop, for noon, thence to =Rock IBrrrs., Brodhagen, for night. Wed - i ;slay—To Thos, Bolton's, lot 19, Ciin 10, a12elI4illap, for roan, then to Geo. Bennewies, lot 8, con. 47, Mc- Killop, for , night. Thursday --To Amos Wickes, 'lot 29, ton. 14, Lo- gan, for neon, thence to Geonge S'ienton's, lot 24, con, 1'1, Logan, foe night. Friday --To his awn sta'hle for noon, where he will remain until the 'fol'lowing Monday noon. This route ' will be continued' throughout the season, health and weather per- mitting. Terms -112 to insure, due Feb. '1st, 1934. JACOB H•IGNtELL, • Proprietor and Manager. Clydesdale Stallion IHAIIIG (21'563) Enrolment No. 4116 Approved. Form 1 M'ond'ay leaves his own stable, let SHEDS LIGHT ON BIB' .Continued 'Customs, 'even inhuman ells' are no't easy 'tor .lohan'ge, Thousand years :after 'the funenall of King lealanr-dug 'alt 'fUr, an (Alexlantder Grea'i, (there in this self -same ooia, was 't:o .dligni;fy ''the .manas'ol of this • general, hH'eph'aestiont, w'it'h guin'any 'gainer," whtill'e the .'water the Danube :were t'o 'submerge grave of 'Attila the 'hull, (add wi blue slbavteis Who dug .the grave .India;. settee ,is: a recent anemo'ry, when t'hle late 'Enape!ror of (Japan a noble ,cionemitt'ted Nara-kdri. 'Albrah!am's ,ohlallanige 'bo' cos tlierefooge, 'coulld volt .be in'ade ,goo his.owbi, liletim.e., At Ur of the I lees he 'had 'been• ',husked' 'by :the scene sites, tp'eit{p'etraitedl .ars ,the 'sth'up ,orf IIsbar,'th'e god!dleee of love. in the 1b�utnied city olf 113iethshan,. e en!t in IAbnath'am's• day, the archae gist has Idiscolvere'd 'the 'correslp'oeu anter to tAs'hharath, ttho- sarn'e gold la's Ishtar, 'wh'os'e '10fabonyi'nati'ons" every ".Nigh''hill" idlistressed ,the Ise it :id'ea11's'tis (nolt ,a'lways the poop •far 'centu'nies, ,B'y ,awfu'1 f'bbwsforrt's, mend, Of !Abraham ,l4imiself was tstilb. .fecte,d' and on 'Moit'nt (Moriah•, q, close to the capital .olf ,Kiiog'MeiC.hi disk, the .bound a you!thifull Isaac to tenni'b1e altar. Only •atter .much ag of soul •dltd the ;patriandh .abandon.'. notion 'that ,parents ethauli'd plass children' through •the fire to !those cj ties, of 'which an exlantple ,was M ooh, and it is significa'n't ''halt' meileifwl enva'ncipa:bioln 'o'f .mi'n'd follow d ' e ,yea'r's Taber, by ,a 'BabyQ'aitS tnsleeip'tion 'declaring a ntern'b might s'u'bstituted in 'sacritflce .for. ,the life a man. ill :was this 'very sutbstitoti that Abrahiam achieved. '. JBitber, tiherdfore,,'were 'the int necine tccnlliobs by whi'oh thesie'fi 'ful obsessions were exorcised., Egypt, 'devee'1'oped' by'laborers in ,tion age, has 'b•eei, revealed 'through` aro neology, ,and the .Pharoah of the , pression is history. On 'Mount 'Sin :im'possib'le to mistake as the mass' .throne 'from which the 'Ten 'Co 'man'dm'ents were p'ro.mutlgalted, i scrip'tion's have been 'disco'vered, i elusive; ` apparenitly, of Egypti ,hieroglyp'hics of the Mosais 'perm According to one reeding, they i elude a sentence in which the la giver ,descn?bes his rescue as a b .From the waters .of the ,Nile, but should be addled' that the interpret ion is 'disputed. On the other then parasitic deposit on the tamales ha ,been noticed which -real'l'y seem o correspond to' ehe dtescripp:tio'n'u manna. Oiae great find may await the a tiquarian, At death 'J.oeeph was ha ored with 'all the usual Egyptian car mortal except actual burial. IH4's hod as borne' by the es'raelites .to Canaa d there : ento.nilbed. el 'that 'septi - re could 'be discovered, with its gyptian sarcophagus and writings',. e or' two doubts would ,be res'ol'ved'. Of Joshua's invasion 'we may now ace the masterly strategy. Jericho the Jo'rda'n is, 'of course, a fact, and e `coll'a'pse .of a 'former Jericho has en de'm.on'strated. 'The only .quer- n here is whether the city twee .mat ruins 'be'fdre i1J'oshua arriv'e'd, a moot int in chr'otn.oil'ogy. There its a istirrii:ng 'passage in which read tho'w Joshua smote a strong - lid called+ IMazor with the 'edge of e' sword, se that "tdiere was 'net any t to breathe"; how 'm a :burned 'Hoz- 'with :fine and utterly destroyed it. the junction :of the ' roads from don and ;Damasctas, Hazoe has been covered', Icdmm'anldin'g ;and sttra- egic site. LE toms, Thousand olf the Bk by eu'ni van- s of the bla it, Qn a'nd died, tom d 'i n IC 'orb- wdr-, !But xi'sit- dlo ling 'es's on eel A'l'e) the a'l ui to ze- in ago the their lie- 01 - his was an be of 0.n er- eatr- lAn ,hon Is- ap- ai, ve 'Cot n- w- ba a it a- d, ks of n' - n e- y ,t wt an ch E on eri by bh! be 32, con. 113, . Hibbert, goes north tl'yq 'tio miles and west to Ed. M leay's for noon. Thence west and south by' way of 'White school to Walter Madge's for night. Tuesday—West to the 2nd concession of Hay, then sotuth to Earl 'Gam.pbe31's for noon, 'then south ;to Leo Joh'ns for night. Wednesday ;East to Larry Taylor's' for noon,' then east - and north •'to Jack Simpson's for night. Thursday (North by way of the 'boundary to his own stable Where he will remain until *Saturday morning Saturday North and east to Donald MdKin non's for noon, then` south r 'to the 1'21h concession and west to his own stable where he' will remain until. the following' 'Monday morning. This route''will be co'ntinued for the sea- son, health and weather permitting. Terms—$10 to insure. WM, COLE (Prop, Enrolment No. 2614, Passed. Form 1 STAR LIGHT 113222(6 This handsome choicely bred Per- cheron Stallion will travel the follow- ing route during the season of 19'313: Monday Will' leave his own, sta'ble at . Mauro and will go to Ed Rose's, 5 miles north of Dublin for nightt. Tuesday will go to John L. Malone's, one mile west of Beechwood. Wed- nesday returns to his own stable. 'T'hursday goes south to Bruce Coop- er's one smile south of . E'lini•vil'le for nig'h't; Friday to Orville Roger's l e. miles north of Kirletoo for noon, Then home for night. Saturday goes to Carlingford and home by way of 'Fullerton, This horse is drawn on trailer and will res'pdnd to calls off route. Terms to insure $12; two nares freer the'same owner, $1'0, 'Parties losing colts will have free service. the. following year. NORMAN PARSONS,,, Munro Proprietor and Manager. (Phone' 20r,5, Dublin. in pa we ho ref or At ISi. un t Shiloh, 'boo where ;Samuel served lin 'the 'Tabernacle, is under 'scrutiny, and *here has been :found, not,in- deed, tike Ark olf the Covenant, 'which alas been 'removed to teer'osal'em, but a much la't'er but still most ancient By- zantine church. At .Mizpe'h, across 'Abe Mandan, where Jacob and Label set up their •p:i1iar •wlitle the words, "The !Lard be !between nee and thee," where, 'moreover, ;Samuel as j'u'dge. presided over the 'earliest of assize' courts, there has Ib'eon a cu'rious .d'is- co'very. It is a kind of . underground leo With a false bottom, sot'fae from wine press, and intended to •defeat. the tax -gatherers. en the days of ,S'am- et] "levsry man did that 'which was itght in his own eyes" and 'tile laws were still du'fiflcttl1 to enforce, The 'ramlptart .of Jerusalem 'from wiich the'Je'busites jeered 'a't Dary'id's' ighky ,m'e'n. lbws been oteccve'red;';aolsoo he watercourse or .tunnel and well u'p' hich Joa'b..climlbed' in order' to cep - ire the citadel by surprise. 'At Afe- idid'o, or ;A'rni'ageed:on, we descent' veinight'of {S'o1oanoei,, the stables here he: kept 'those ,horses 'from lehich he derived such profit with e tholes in the stones, :through hich the halters ef'thorses were tc'h.ed,Alrtentlion is devoted also to. ve'rn's and grottoes ..u�nd'er Jeru-' 1'em which may 'prove .to have been e royal tombs where the kings o'f des, erodh;'iit his tune,"s'lept with Is fathers."E 'ves' archaeology .he's to..bew are -oif Iocry'pil a., Yet' there. is o'ne romance, 11 to 'be authenticated; Which it a u r h m it vv ti g t'1 wa w th ea hi ca se 'ell fee hi ap sti worth the .telllnng for its awn sake: That So'l'omon married a princess of 4Elgytpt is on record, 1Po'litically, Mati Marie, os the bride -wa's called; repre- sented . a com n'ereiel treaty. But in nelson a isusceptilb'1'e 'mo'nanch .found dyer tto be worthy of a gorgeous: peal= ace, all Ito .herself. The story is that Pharaoh wanted to poison Solomon, an'd', +visi'tin'g :hitt ,for 'this ,fr•Iie'ndly. ptsnpose, called 'on 'lura daughter to offer the fetal 'cup, Loving ,too dearly to olb�ey, she dared not disobey, and, as a compromise 'between' da'ty and affection, she :da'mak ,th'ewine and died', •IOn tire 'rough pavement' of Athab's palaoe at Satntsiiia' we might linger, seeking 'the 'shade 'oif Jezebel, tlu'at. most audacious 'of abl yerepir.es, who; with her husband slain, "`painted' her face and tired ' her 'head;" ‘ 'and so taunted (King. Jehu, the 'triutmipleant rival. 'How she :was el -moven 'from thee window-etthis king's daughter in, ael her tgl'oryl-land 'devtouped by the dogs of '.the street, ,is am'ong the great scenes 'orf All time. iDividted and dlistraugh't, the llittde kingdoms Of J'u'dlaih ,a'i'd Israel, in - 'spired by pirdpthets but Ito.o.nftten be- trayed by princes, struggled with dire great ,emp'i'res, rising .and hieing a- round :them, to make •good the ohial- letnge of IA!bea'h.am. But in the 'end' the chosen .p.eoptte were ovetrwhellraed by conquest eand captivity. As 'pitbgeilms, they 'had l'e'ft the M'esopeitgtni.an plaint 'behind .them; as prisoners, they re- turned thither. et iseetned as if jus- tice and mercy hadT'been overwhelm- ed •fo'revenr Iy .the .panoply of :p'o'mp end power. It was 'Assyria 'that now do'm•inated ,the Mesopotamia ,where -'A'b'raham dwelt in Un of the Challdoee; and ,at I o'nsab'ad, 'near the Tigris,. ,there has been diecove--red the' vast'pal'ace of this piti'les's autocracy. let was •eo'unded by the fierce conqueror `Sargon, who cab 1lt0ns/tea Samaria ,and :removed' by tfoulce the first of the Jews- to he 'brought into captivity. The ,king 'who -co'inpleted 'the palaoe was that !Seneiadherilb who, in ,the days of IHezekiah, "'dame down Il'Ike a wolf an the fold" against Jerusalem itself, and was met by the king with'a calm courage that has been, 's'in'ce his day, among the ,glories of faith, It 'seemed as:if pride and 'plower most be om'ni:pcten!t forever over the free sp�ixit ,of mean, Those huge wing- ed 'bulls, syneboei•c of a ;monarchy thiat was mainly muscle, that exultation over d'efeat'ed' enemies, eh!a't eag'ennoss 'far the mere rapture Of con!queslt s1 'this was carved i'ndeli'bly' on corridors of stone.•Yet where today is 'Senn'a- cheefb'? :S't'range in'de'ed is the irony that lifts their frieze of 'solid stone, !100 feet ,in 'length, 'wibh• its record of san'guin'ary exploits, an d, adding the guardian bul'ls that weighs 'forty tants, transports •these trophies to Chicago B4A 113 AND (SEWING 'CIRCLFJS !Deacon Hyne had been telling Cal- eb Peeslee of his fortitude at a meet- ing of the sewing' circle, held at the deacon's home. 'I've been. there three mortal hours, Kel'leip," he asserted, "or well 'long 'to'.rds three anyway; and I was 'the o'ny alien there and they've 'talked sitidtly," `4riow'd you happen to be there in the First place," asked Caleb, "It was ,my wife's doin's," replied I -lyre, "The hired girl's gone, and my wife w'anted I sh'd stand by, so to speak, and sort .of fetch and car- ry for 'em if they needed me; but when I'd been setbin' there three hours more or less and they •hadn't needed anything I sort of eaattehed nay chance and stied out and struck over here." He 'paused to 'pass his hnn:dker- chief over a hearted brew. "I 'bet a man never was gladder to be well out. of a mess than I was wisen 1 got out '03 that!" he asserted fervently, IMr. Peaslee can si:dered this thoughtfully, "Wal, melblbe ,so," he said at last; I heard a man use theui very swine words once, when it seemed to 'ire he had 'full,'s much reason to be g'led's you ,have. The man's name was Eno - bury Mason, and he was a great hand for huntin' and trappin'; you'd hardly ever find hills 'thout a gun aver eleaudder, e'T'hem days," said Caleb, "there was plenty of bears herealbo'uts—,too' many, folks thought that had sheep or hogs that they let run out into the wolods for beechnuts or acorns. Most of the time, as you know, a bear's ready to make a child's trade with a man—you let him alone and the bear will let you alone; but am old she - bear with cubs is different, "That was the kind of a ,bear Ma- son run afoul of goin' Over to Grind- stone pond one time, He was gestin'. -out hemlock over there end fetchin' 'lois p'visions in from the settlements; Ibo'atin' .em' across the pond rnosltly, shut this day his bateau leaked so bad be was gain' to make 'em into a pack and carry 'em on his back 'round the pond—four miles or better,—and •the pack was, so big and heavy he left his gun ,behind. "I ain't .goon'' to try to tell you all he had to make up the pack, but he said there was justt short of siuty pounds in it; there, was a fresh 'ham for One thing that weighed' twenty pounds or so, in the bottom of the knapsack, and '.on.top of that was his. other fixin's-a bottle of ,in'lasses,'and a bag of sugar and 'nether one of salt and one of red pepper -tall the things time, but he managed to slip his areas out of the pack straps and jump' for a little birch tree—and not a second too soo neither! "Of course \the tree was too small for a bear to climb, but yet there he was, treed till she saw fit to go away end,leeve him to go his ways; so he sot about tryln to harry her, IIe had a big jackknife, and he managed to hack off a long limb end lash " the knife to the end of it, figgerin' that iiteb'beehec'd jab her with that and {deed her 'cough to either drive her away or wealcen`her; but the fest jab he made, she fetched the stick a lick that sent it fifty foot away and made his arm sing clear to the shoulder, And all he'd made out to do was to lose his knife and get t'he hear so mad she triedto charge 'up the tree. "She quit that after a spell; and went tonosin'.round and ;gruntin' to herself, "and 'twan't but a ininuie be- fore she some to his pack and smelt (that fresh ham; and 'cordial'. to Mason she went after it like a neeniacl The fust wipe she made tore ,the flap open, and she rammed her head and ane paw In, cltawin, to fetch the meat out where's she c'd get at it. Mason said she made one mad sort of a grunt and started another when all at once he sensed Chet' so!nyethin' was the mat- ter. It was the red pepper. "He said he wouldn't have b'lieved any critter c'd back so fast in a circle, 'blindfolded, as that bear did, and all the tune teanin' at the knap- sack to get it offal her head -and all the time the a'wfullest noises' camera' out of the sack dike a man sneezin', he said, only 'fifty times louder and madder! And 'b'tween sneezes she was groanin' and retdhin' f'r breath— and that only sucked more of the red pepper into her .nose sad lungs. "F'in'ly she riz up on her hind legs and gave one last snatch at the knap- secic,' and that time she fetched clear When You Have A HORSE or CO YOU WANT REMIOOED,; Phone promptly to WILLIAM STONE SONS, r Phone 22 — Ingersoll Phone 215 W — Stratford • THE BOOK HE NEVER 'READ !Lady Currie, well 'mown to Eng- lish letter under her pen name of. Vio- let Fane; told an amusing. incident of her life in Constantinople' when her husband Lord Currie, was ambassa- dor to the Su'beine Porte, She was a rapid and ontnivorous reader and. •Currie trusted her to read and re port on 'books with which otherwise he would have had to make personal acquaintance. Much precious time was thus saved for a 'busy diplomat,. and the task was entirely coegetfiaL to his 'competent unofficial .reader. .Dine clay he handed' her a new biog- raphy of the Sultan, Abdul Harold, gustpublished in England. A short 'time afterwards he asked herwhether it was interesting. "Yes," she answered, "but—' a just then' some visitors of distinction were a'nn'ounced and she dud not fin- ish the sentence. That evening .hns- 'band and wife dined with the .Sultan. Conversation was more formal than. enterthining and indeed flagged to a. depressing degree. ]Lord Currie had .a - 'happy inspiration, "Sire," he said, "an interesting faoo3 has just appeared about yaurselfe't Lady !Currie made a frantic ef€orie: to reach this foot under the table but; without success. '"Ahl" said the Sultan, " L.shouid '. dike to see that book!" "You shall have niy copy," 'the .po- lite ambassador hastened to assure of it and at the same time 'brought out him. At their departure fromthe pal- e, sneeze that Mason said almost ace the Sultan's words in response to Iblosved him out of the tree; and then their leave-taking were a reminder: without loo'kin' f'r her cub, or f'r Ma- "I will seed for the hook in the mom. - son, or the ham, or anything else in .iege, the world, she lit out of that cleariat' When Lady Currie had her husband nealcin' twenty foot to the jump and alone with her in the carriage she makin' 'em often! said to him between mirth and dee- "And Mason, knowin' she'd never pair: come hack, slid down the tree ant "The book you reco'mmend'ed" ee gebhered up his stuff, what he c'd fine, rue Sultan opens with this seenteacer and made for the camp. And when he •A more loathsome toad than the Sul - come to tell me of it he made use of :in A'bd'ul Hamid I never sawl" the same words you did—that no man When the Sultan's servant called. w^as ever gadder to be out of a mess next day he was informed with many: than he was!" messages of apology that the book OR'ANGE MINT BEVERAGEcould not be found. Pt was sent for, always vainly, several times after - Moil together For 10 minutes, Zee wards; and the next time the melba -s- cups water and 12 ou'ps sugar. Add sador had an audience the 'Sultan,. a man'd Want to do the simple sort.ijuice of 6 lemons and 2'oran.ges and o'f cookin' he'd do in a woods camp, 'grated rind of 1 orange. Pour aver 2a clearly suspicious of something you wrong, y know. as the spoils of research fl handfuls mini leaves, crushed, cover it Lord.Currie "He'dgot reit well 'throughyC rrie trade what excaserr pretty the closely and let stand 1 hour. Straw ' he could, but he never produced .i'f5e- reproached hien 'with • dupltc-'- at country comm' to the pond and s «ralkin' over. some moss—and h Ids moccasins on he was movie' et as a shadder--when he rounded ig root that was turned out of the ere and walked spang onto a bear and a crib, 1105411' round in a' rotten or ginger ale. •w^a t '"I's this your first ride in a taxi?".ate asked 'the young man, curiously: a b Yes, replied Aunt Mirandy, "and I declare I don't see how.these taxi - dancers 'find roomto even stand up, let alone move around in here." re 'first through a sieve, then through a1 book, nor did Albdul Hamid, though cloth. This may be poured into a fruit he probably .guessed he was not CM - jar and kept sec efisiitely. thusiasltically admired in Great :Britain, To serve: Fill tall glasses with fine- ever learn there existed ly shaved ice add '5 tablespoonsate him pre - e bet suming enough to designate him. as .^. erage and fill glasses with ice ' water toad log,after ants prob'ly, The cub sighted, him first and made slaw d a sort of a whimper, and when he did her antigu that 'too. 'The use of money is all the ad- vantage there is in having money. id you .cure your wife of e craze ?" "What did you give 'baby for his; !first ,present ?" the old bear turned and saw him,. "Oh, I just' gave her a 1947 model) -"We opened his money box and: Masan didn't have any toomush ease for her an'niversa'r bought the little darling a lovely y' electric iron." Eli tinter eckok • • We Are Selling Quality Book d' Books are Well Made, Carbon is Clean and Copies Readily. styles, Carbon Leaf and Black Back. Prices as Low as You Can Anywhere. Get our Quotation on Your Next Otvier. • Al] Get The Seforth News SEAFORTH, ONTARIO,