HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance Times, 1927-06-09, Page 7'777777771, "
111 1141
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"Tetttreday,,jUne 9th, 1927,
ADvANcE-Tim s
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V▪ sniummiummimmnississimmommummil
and Christ showed his divine ergin by
the love in hie heart, proving itself
by loving deeds and words. By his
fruits he is known, even as his diS'-
eiples are keown. And healing all
that Were oppreesed of the devil. Pet-
er centresatttenion on the cure of
demoniacs because in such eases
Christ was struggling not only again-
st diseased bodies but against the epir-
itual forces of evil working back of
and through the diseased bodies, For
God was with him, ... Nicodemus, a
member of the Sanhedrin, had ad -
emitted that only the presence and aid
of God could enable Jesus to work
this miracles.
And we are witnesses of all things
which he did both in the country of
the Jews, and in Jerusalem. Christ
had appointed/them his witnesses be-
eause they had in their own experi-
ence a complete view of all that he
had done and, said during the three
years of his public work. Whom also
they slew, hanging him on a tree.
'Tree' is Peter's unique and charac-
teristic term for the cross, and from
him the expeession has gone into all
•Christian thought and literature.
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SABBATH SCHOOL LESSON, - monies.
June lath. • The word which he sent unto the
children of Israel. This word of God
• GOLDEN TEXT —Many arethe al- concerning the Messiah, the Prince of
fiictions of the righteous; but Je-
hovah delivereth him out of them
6,
PETER PREACHING TO
•" CORNELIUS
The other • speechee reported by
Luke must be understood as being
greatly ,condensed, hardly more than
an outlifte perfectly
Him God raised 'up the third day,
and gave him to be made manifest.
Christ, as lf said, had
Gr
tress
MC 1TWER
Copyrigl-t, 1526, by Collier's Pteeitly and G. P. Putnam Sons
°BIH Orimm'e Progress" is a ploturization by Film Booking Offices of
America, Inc., (F. 8.(;,),ef H. O. Witwor's stories of the same name.
_ —
trnropszs • I could kill off ray swiftly growing
BiZt Grimm,r'Vino /rose wins, 1 116,1ke of being in the movies.
kery 2
Fairfax bm•
eroes tee i elavettra ealled the turn—I was sate
heavyweight sem, n oft the (ciin. isfied I was no ector, and I hadat
try under the tutelage of rt .„ti i ...1.t.e stasptctoo of craving to be one. '
•
d
faZe Oar/ton Herne, tut ontlots'or 0., liee Inc risked their lives to
ie constantly seeking Mrs (it:t;f• :
Om, a dissolute scion of stelae it geo 1 11.!-17,:leoritaoleltivairl:cr;eie,1111:aPaleisalitiiriLddprtoo-
Fercl. Hill's bugaboo i8 Jark Pci,..1 1 lett 1 wee being made to look
• I'd dAbl le lc wasr°d-
'mpiigijozatoirusi, .risolizine:orivierrart,ilta 1s1(3./?;se !,,i':ci.'evcil he eietneir.hatts:itcucinitrse.
friend. Barbara Baxter is Lars 1".0101Y doing has appearing in a
etellees Heves of close-ups With
Pansy, which daily kept insisting -
that her part be built up more and
mine be cut down.
While an this was taking place
Barber,. treated me like I was poi-
son ivy. When ,I ,Oid manage to
slip away from the studio to see
how mattere was going at my tea
parla,r she got buay with the girls
or the customers etee minute I dark-
sweetheart and "gooa inf./canoe."
-
One night me Barbara step-,
Ped out to one of Horne's eipper
parties for Pansy after saet;
her chores in the show. Whet, the
crockery had been cleared away
and we was down to dancing,
watching the cabaret axle tae out-
of-town buyers viewing our famous eller', the threshold of the drum.
• 'party with awe, Pansy, made tho Ac.t. n1hto Clio was generally "too
fatal crack. " •, ft,t;gued" to give me the boon of
he hiinsepower
"Carl," she murmurs with a =turf a intervi,,w. When she did it was
to raise himself from the dead, but deTousisr premetiug glance at the like cahing on your older sister:"
•lovelorn millionaire, "do you, know ees nerves /was shot to pieoes be-
orily because •his Father had given what I'd love to be?" tweon that and the opium fiend's
him the commandment to do so. Not He missed out as a euesser. • dream I was appearing 10.
to all the people, but unto witnesses "I'd love to be a movie etas." Butch IF'ord, Left Hook O'Brien
only onc
After his resurrection our Lord did e watch wee thoroughly
not resume his public • ministry,
preaching to great crowds; but he
showne, himself to his disciples in so
•great numbers (at one to tune to more
m
than five hundred of the- and 00
so many occasions than there could
be o crnestion as to the fact •of his
resurrection. • Even to us, who ate
and drank with him after he rose
from the dead. With the disciples
in the upper room, with the two dis-
ciples at Emmaus, and with the seven
disciples on the shore of the Sea of
Galilee; perhaps on other occasions.
And he charged us to preach unto
the people. • They were to go preach-
ing to 'all nations' to 'the uttermost
part of the earth,' including of course
in their ministry vast numbers of Gen-
tiles like Cornelius, And to testify
that this is he who ordained of God
to be the Judge of the living and the
dead. Christ himself- -claimed author-
ity to judge all men, condemning or
approving them and, deciding their
etern destiny. '
To him bear all the prophets wit-
ness. • Corneius had evidently made
a study of the Jewish scriptures with
his house hold, and Peter had learned
that fact: That through his name
every one that believeth on him shall
receive remission of sins. Thus in
Iso.. 49 :6 it is foretold that the Mes-
siah should be "a light to the Gen-
tiles," and in Joel 2 :32 that who-
soever—in all lands and, of all races
—should call on the name of the
Lord should he delivered from ,the
bondage of sin.
•'While Peter yet spake these words
the -Holy Spirit fell on all them that
heard the word. That web God's own
approval of Peter's act and words,
the divine seal on the whole transac-
that were choosen before of GodsaysPansy point blank, anti ebifty Jones wee about the
.
earth why your ambitiou
not be realized," says Herne.
"You were in pictures once, -were
you not?"
"Yes and "no," laughs Pansy, "I
was an eXtra—an enter—with0th-
ars at one stage of my battle with
New York. But that wee nip ct
the clicking cameras has given rae
a fearful therst for more. Bill
should remember that --be worked
in a picture with me, also as a me
"Well, Pansy, I see no reason on
Peace, Reconciler of warring men and
Reconciler of men and God, was
preached first by a .long line of an-
cient prophets sent from God to His
chosen people Israel. Preaching good
tidings of peace by Jesus Christ. -(He
is Lord of all.) In this parenthesis
Peter catches up the thought of his
breathless and involved sentence.
• That •saying you yourselves know.
The Christio:n gospel has been spread
settirig forth' the as far as Caesarea bythe preaching
genor of the argument, and reproduc- of Philip, if by no othermeans. Peter
• ing inany of the words and sentences bad &need with ,Cornelitts, and knew
• • used. that he and his fiiend had already the
And Peter °Pealed his mouth, and outlines of the life and work of Jesus
said. Again we roast notice the force, on Which he could build his further
eloquence, and skill with which Peter
• speaks. Of a truth I perceive that
God is no respector of persons, -God
• contidere carefully every person; He
knows each one of us better than We
know ourselws; but has no regard
• for what men regard as •of chief
importance in a person, such as wealth
or tank or worldly knowledge or
physical beauty and strength, except
so far as tile possession of these may
,•indicate character,
•But in everY nation. Not only the
• Jewish nation, though scattered ab-
• road in every land, but the .natives of
all countries, belonging to all races.
He that feareth hitn, and worketh
righteoUsticss, God requires two
things of us; towards hint -Self, rever-
ence; towards other men uprightness,
3ustice, service. Is acceptable to Hint
The Jews held that they alone, God'e
chosen people, the holy nation, were
aeceptable to Hitt, and, that all others
• must reach God by passing through
the gates of the Judiao faith and core -
instruction. Which was published
through out allludea, beginning from
Galilee. Jesus began his public min-
istry in Galilee, his home province,
afterwards extending it to Judaea,
SaMaria, and Peraea, the region east
of the Jordon. After the baptism
which John pteached. John the Bap-
tist urged, the people to be baptized
in token of their repentance and ;de-
sire for a new and pure life.
tion.
And they of the circumcision that
believed were amazed, as many as
•came with Peter. These were the six
Christian- Jews whona Peter had
brought from Joppa as witnesses, an-
ticipating the criticism that came lat-
er, Becanee that on the Gentiles also
was poured out the gift of the Holy
Spirit. Thus • the Gentiles were ac-
cepted by •the Almighty on the same
plane with the believing Jews, being
certified with the same great token.
For they„heard hitn speak with ton-
gues, and magnify God. This speak -
leg "with tongues," that is, in langu-
ages previoesly unknown to them,
was the most amazing phenoinetion
of Pentecost, seeming to have Ina -
pressed the people more than the rush-
ing wind and the tongees of: fire.
a'anSweree no objection that was actu-
ally made, but one that he had. antici-
pated would 1:kennel:le if he should pro:
coed to -induct Gentiles into the Jew-
ish rite of baptism.
Can any man, forbid the water, that
these should be baptized, who have re-
ceived'the Holy Spirit as well as we?
John the Baptist forctold' that Jesus
would baptize 'with the Holy Spirit and
with fire. •. -
And he commanded Haan to be bap-
tized in the name of Jesus Christ.
Paul did not himself baptize, but had
others administer the rite, lest divis-
ions in the church should, arise of
those baptized by him, by Apollos, by
l3arnabas, etc. Then prayed they to
tarry certain days. They wished to
learn intich more about Christ from
One who had so full keowledge con-
cerning him, and it seetot from Acts
it 3 that Peter coosented, and by
abiding with the Roman soldier 'car-
ried out his newly discovered Cites-
tlan prieciple of wide fellowship.
tven Jesus of Nazareth, The early
Christians, remembering how Nazar-
eth was despised, apd Jestts also be-
catise he came from such an insig-
nificant town, rejoiced to couple the
name of his home village With that
of the Messiah who had e shed glory
newt the plates How God appointed
hint with Ncily Spirit and with power.
God had net scorned the Nazarene
Whom Men scornech but bestowed up-
on him the foloese of vowel- that
dwelt in the Godhead, }even the Holy
Spirit of the Infinite Teinity, Who
wt(sit about doing geed. God is love,
enjoying "themselves as actors.
They wasn't getting Mach raoney,
but they could langt $eut loud.
Jack •Fairfax made his peace with
Carlton l'ilerne, humbly .apologizing
far tILA Laarn."atrr tin vilitch Pansy
figured which caused Herne to give
PairfaX the air. Herne, a nice
clean tid, was a colander when it
come to holding grudges. ;Jo Fair-
fax hazer acting around the set
where me and Pansy was working,
per. carefulai
to cheer Pansy's ectg and
••
"Hush your mouth," 1 growls. agree egan. Heene in everybhing.
been trying to live that lawn. • 'Prying get rid of him mta like
Anvways, they tock are out of tat trying to get rid of asthaea Him
es"
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"2y Jove,s1a1 e nintere combination that would, make today!"
MoviA! ate, put in, s title instead." and our director got to be quite
"WhY, I never knew that," ex-
claims Herne, All at once he
MEICISS the table with his hand.
"By Jove, what a picture combina-
• tion that would make today: Pan-
• sy Pilkington and Bill Grimm—the
star of the Follies and the man the
chantplon is afraid to fight?'
I looked up to find both Barbara
• and Pansy staring at me—and, oh,
what a difference theta was in
their • expressions:
"That team in a film production
would be an unbeataole box -of -lee
attraction," goes on Herne, all hop-
ped np about his thought and no-
ticing nothing. "I say—,how would
you like -to try it?"
"We'll be twin stars, big boy!"
cried Pansy, suddenly reaching
over the table and clasping my
hand.
• Being a woman, Pansy read mY
hesitation lute you read a bill-
• board. She glateed like a little
imp from me to Barbaro, and then
shook her finger at my fiancee.
•'Till is simply waiting for you
to yes hint, Barbara," she smiles.
"Come on, be a sport. You needn't
be afraid that t'll steal hint—I'm
sure you've got hini hobbled, bound
and chained."
"It is refreshing to know that at
last you are sure," comes back Bar-
bara, smiling, too, but fit to be tied,
• "But, really, I hadn't considered
• that phase of the matter. I'm nat-
urally interested in Bill's future.
I want to see him hitch his evegon
to a star, bet, not necessarily a
movie star. Frankly, I'm opposed
to Bill's going into pictures, not
• because I fear for Iris constancy,
but because he is not an actor and
• would soon tire of efforts to make
him a synthetic oneel
To put the fitishing touch on a
horrible night, or the way down
she stairs me and Barbel% is stag-
ing a lover's quarrel when we run
full tilt into Jack Pairfax. tie
c;ouldn't miss hearing J3 ',taxa rid,
lug me and the loog of delight
chummy, dollar cigars and a fiana
which Fairfax kept in constant cir-
culation helping no little. g
• Well, the very sight of this guy
leas enough to burn me up, but his
sarcastical cracks about my acting
and my allowing doubles to take'
the risks for me soon had me unlit
to be •at large. One afternoon I
was in the midst of a very serious
scene With Pansy, and at the crit-
ical moment Inairfax, in a chair be-
side the director, let out a loud
and raucous hee-haw. When we
both stopped running, Fairfax must
ot been a good nine blocks from
the studio, and I was at the gates
being held back by four watchmen.
• Then one day he shows up on
the set with a big, husky young lad
for a companion. If his boy friend
heel a set of wheels on him I'd of
figured he was a box car, and he
looked as tough as thirty days in
the hoosegow. Butch looked the
burly newcomer over, scratching
his chin in a thoughtful way.
"Get ready for some grief," mut-
ters Left Hook O'Brien, nudging
Shifty Jones, and they ranged
themselves beside rae just in case.
Fairfax brought his fled right over
to where w.s was standing.
"This is Young Hoffman," he
says, with a short grim Young
Hoffman, blinking at the high-pow-
ered lights and sneaking open.
mouthed looks at the somewhat un
garbed Pansy and the other actors,
neither denies or agrees with the
• charge. I remembered reading
about him in the sport pages for
the past couple of weeks—a new
heavyweight Sensation which had
been knocking off all and sundry
out in the tanks, Me and my hart-
dlers viewed hint with interest. He
looked like a good boy. But you
can't tell nothing about none of
'etn till the bell ringe.
"Yoe fight this fellow, Mr. Movie
Hero, and you'll never box the
champion or anybody else,! prom-
ise von." says e'altfax savagely.
• his pan maJe rats watt to bury my "Look here you big stiff," I bust
fist to the hilt In it. out, we shoot the last of this op -
Well, lads and lassies,,Herne loot era next week, •. It's a fight scene,
no time getting' the, machinery get me? Well, you bring over
turning over tot foisting me anti Young Hoffreati and lel take him
pansy toy a jengssaffering motion- on in that scene Instead of the
I tu public My unllioneiro tentlarete set-up they got hired tor
bucldy become a hundred horsepow- the oart. e'll box him for nothing,
er goletter overnight, Studio elle yeti can pay him. Why d'ye
space was rented at one of tho ii thine of them berries?"
Long Island tura dtstlllerios, a "We'll be here," cries Fairtex
elightly goofy director was hiro,. with a loot< ot Joy, and Walks brisk -
and the story bought. ne the stage with Young Hoff -
The scenario sported the hoth *Melt had looked hard at
souediteg title ot 'The Fige les ie.. eee never opened his pan from
Lovers,"
and It was tho rev -lee t 'into. he come in till he left,
eolleotlea of hokum Ohm' you. •n: • hal shinty putthat gil
or anybody else ever laid a tag+ i ;; 'ranee.
One et my tree acts WAS to tt-v ft twit' quite it while later before
ate peete in/ this front; ieint'; f 111 r'nllard what Tel done, I'd
Left Hook 0 Briet anti aty st: If into a real tight in -
Jones, my hencliere. e-ee 1 ve.' a reel Cue, tor what our
Slit I want to say to you !MR teseeleir was always willing "the
• afternoon that dot even the corn-, eta puttee) telimax" to our roovia,
•tkrting presence of these bests( • (To be Continued)
UNIVERSITY OF WESTERN ONTARIO
SUMMER SCHOOL, JULY 4TH TO AUG, 13TH
itrir etralroetve: front iownit
gueeits o atudyt
Su: pdkeect:a
Ringstest or the Regis-
trar, Dr,PR. Basalt.,
Imucion, merle.
Special Courses for Teachers
Course innature study and AVUoitore.
2. Review course in Bios School Geometry.
- 3. Consar In Library Science,
Courses offered also In Chem-
istry, English, Erench, Gem:ant
Greek, Bistory, Lstin Mathc..
sties and Zoology.
A splendid social and athletic
program throughout,
Beautiful new Ilniversity Build-
ings in a 260 me Mash.
Start On It B.A, now,
e
SS
appeals to YOU for support
QINCE the War, the Red Cross has disbursed over
Seven Million Dollars for the Soldiers, Women,
Children and Frontier Families of Canada.
About half of this has been spent for disabled soldiers
—half in the other services of the Society about which
you have been told. The Treasury is almost empty.
$1;000,000 Needed Now
for Red Cross W.&
The Red Cross brings cheer to our disabled warriors and
their families. It stintulates the, children of' Canada to
healthy living and gooa. citizenship. It relieves suffering,
and brings sltillecl attendon to Canada's frontier districts
remote from other aid. Its work is indispensable.
It now appeals to YOU, as a patriotic and humane Canadiaa
citizen, to contribute generously to its need for funds.
Nation -Wide Appeal 2
Canadian Red Cross Society
Send Contributions to:'
Ontario Division, Canadian Red Cross Society,
410 Sherbourne Street, Toronto 5, Ontario
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