Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance Times, 1927-09-08, Page 3GORRIE Dr, William Ross, of Kitchener; was a Gorrie visitor on Stinday. Rev. Mr. Armstrong., of Wroxeter, conducted the service in Gorrie Uni- ted church on Sunday. Messrs. Spence and S. Ashton, left for the west on.IVlonday on the har- vest excursion, William Murray, who . is seriously ill in ;Listowel, is not progressing as favorably as his friends would., wish, The death of A'dan1 Young, of Or- ange Hill, occurred on Friday. Mr. Young is survived by four children, William, John, bilary and Margaret, and his widow. Interment was made in Gorrie ccine)ery on Monday after- noon. • Paul Adams, who lost one eye as a result of an accident with a burst- ing water glass on a threshing en- gine, is making' good progress, ' Miss "Alicia Towsend no.turned from her home here to Parkhill on Monday to resume her position as stenogra- pher. James' Spencer, teller of the Bank of Commerce here, is being transfer- red in, about a week's time back to his home town of Stratford. Another Stratford man is to take Mr. Spen- cer's place. William Irwin has completed " 25 years' service in the Gorrie post of- fice. Mr. Irwin has the greatest num- ber of years' service to his crdeit of any of the postmasters in this dis- trict. Mr. W; Hfl Eagleson, of Cobourg, ie renewing acquaintances ni the vil- lage. Mrs. L. F. Ashton, who has spent the 1 tst two months with relatives at Edmonton Alberta, returned home on Saturday.. Harvest Thanksgiving service will be held in St. Stephen's '.Aiiglieati church on Sunday nest, September nth, at 2.30 pin Rev. J. N. H. Miles, of Goderich, will have charge of the service: Among 'those who are m Toronto this week are: Miss Margaret Gra- ham, Mrs. A. Hamilton and Alexan- da, Mr. and Mrs. H. V. Holmes,' Mrs R. E. James, Mr. Gordon Jefferson, Mrs, Gordon ,Barton and Miss P. Stinson. Mr, Emerson Shera, of Detroit, spent the week -end at his home here. Miss Townsend,'who has been hol- idaying at her home;.^returned to her position. in Parkhill last week. Mr. and Mrs. George French and family, of Arthur; Mr. and Mrs, Sam Corbitt, ofPaltnerston; Mr; and Mrs. Roy Wherley, and Mi•. and Mrs.. Charles :Epworth and'family, of Har- riston, and Mr: and Mrs. Alex. Has: tie and baby, of Durham, iviere visit- ors Sunday with Mr. and Airs. Rob- ert Patterson, HURON COUNTY SCHOOL FAIR DATE'S Hensel] Sept.`3 Zurich Sept 9. Wroxeter Sept. 13 Ethel . Sept. 14 Walton Sept. i5 Belgrave Sept. 16 _:...Fordwich a Sept. 17. •::Varna Sept. 19 'Goderich 'Township; Sept, 20 Colborne Township Sept. 21.-.- Aslnfield Township Sept. 22 St. Helens Sept. 24 Winchelsea Sept, 26 Blyth Sept; 28`. Crediton .....- Sept 29 Grand Bend Sept, 3o Dashwood Oct. 3 Clinton Town Oct, 4 Clinton (rural) Oct. '5 Note that the dates of Fordwich and St,: Helens.fairs have been chang- ed. from those dates supplied by the original list. TENTH 'LINE IOWICR Miss Marguerite, Pritchard spent some tune with.fiiends in Mitchell. Mr. and Mrs.: i.'r ecl. Schnittker and Milfred, of :Listowel, sent the week-. end with Mr, and -Mrs, Thoinas Strong,, • Mr. and Mrs, Charlie •.,l3alden and daughter Marian, of,Toronto, spent a few days with Mr. and Mrs. William Craig, b-li. and Mrs, William Craig and ] aeel,'and also Jack Craig, Mr•. and Mrs, Charlie Baldwin. and little Mar- jail, Mr. and Mrs. jack Deennerling and family, spent Sunday evening with Mr. and Mrs, Thomas Strang. FRED DAVE' Village Clerk Issuer of Mrariage Licenses, The law now requires the license be taken out three .days before the ceremony, SUNDAY AFTERNOON September xrth SOLOMON DEDICATE$ THE TEMPLE•—x. Kings 8.,,, Golden:Text—I Was glad they said unto me; Let us go unto .the house of Tehovah,—Ps. 122:s. The Lesson in Its Setting. Titne—The temple was +dedicated B.C. rorx, ss Place 'Tie temple hill, op tlae east. of Jerusalem. The Building of the Temple. Then Solomon assembled the eld- ers of Israel, and all the heads of the tribes, the princes of the fathers' houses of the children of Israel, unto king Solomon in Jerusalem Some think that three classes of represent- atives are here named, viz., the elders,' who were members of the ° king's council; the chiefs of the , twelve. tribes.; and the leaders of divisions smaller than the tribes. To bring up the ark of the covenant of Jehovah. The ark was so called, because its chief contents were the two tables of stone on which was engraved the llealogne, or God's covenant with his people. • Out,sof the city of David, which is Zion. Evidently Zion, the city of David, was not the temple hill, on the east of Jerusalem, but some consider that it was the lower, south- cin shnr of that hill. And all the men of .Israel assem- bled themselves unto king Solomon. It was the feast of tabernacles, the thanksgiving feast held after the ,har- vests were all in, and, every male Is- ra,elite was obliged, to go to Jerusa- leni for file festival. At the feast, in the, month Ethanim, which is the 'sev- enth month. That is, the month be- ginning at the .middle of September and ending at the middle of October, for the year began at the vernal equi- nox, the middle' of March. And all the elders of Israel came, and the priests took .up the ark. It was the duty of the Levites to carry, the 'ark, but the priests always cov- ered it first from public vision, and on occasions of special importance, such as the passage of the Jordan and the march around Jericho, the priests carried the ark. And they brought up the ark of Jehovah, and the tent of meeting. The "tent of meeting" was the tent- sanctuary which Moses made for use in the wilderness. And all the holy vessels that were in the Tent Bas- ins for holding the blood of the sac- rifices, lavers for washing the priests' hands, and other apparatus connected with the sacrifices and :the service of the sanctuary.. Even these did the priests and the Levites bring up. Care for the vessels of the sanetuary was normally the work of the Levites who were not priests; every priest, it must be remembered, was a Levite, i.e,, ;a member of the tribe of Levi: And king Solomon and all the con- gregation of Israel, that were assem- bled unto hien, were with him before the ark. The ark, which stood for the presence of Jehovah, was the central thing in the entire ceremony, as it was theheart of the temple which had been erected, Sacrificing ,sheep and oxen that could not be counted or numbered for multitude. It has been suggested that perhaps, at every stage of the ,oilrney up to the temple hill, these extensive sacrifices were offered, thus Praying• for the blessing of God, upon this transfer, God's Glory in the 'Temple. And the priets brought in the ark of the covenant of Jehovah unto its place. 'every object in God's house should have "its place." Into the or- acle of the house. The inner (west- ward) division of the temple, the room from which the voice (ora) of God issued forth, An "oracle j is ft, divine or a divinely inspired utterance. To the most holy place. The place_ was so holy that only the high', priest' might enter it,` and he only once• a year, on the great Day of Atonement: Even under the wings of the cheru-. bum. The cherubim were two winged golden creatures placed on either side of the alk and facing it, representing the worship of all created •being'dir- ected toward the Presence of the Ai- mighty which flamed up between these usages. For the cherubim spread forth their wings over theplace of the ark. Over k Thursday, September 8th roxeter New WILL YOU SUPPORT A GOVERNMENT WITH A.' RECORD OF The net debt of Canada when the Government came into power in 1922 was - $2,422,135,801 The net debt on July 31, 1927, was $2,295,335,940 making the net reduction since 1922 amount to $126,799,861 Reductions: have been made h Sales Tax, Income T., x,' Postal Rates, Receipt and Check Stamps. Tariff reductions have been made on Agricultural Imple- ments, Fishermen and Miners' Supplies, Automobiles, etc. Trade treaties have been nego- tiated: with several countries, and Canada's exports to for- eign countries have increased roil . .. $3.4,405,270 in 1922 to $711,716,495 in 1927 The British preference has been maintained and slightly in- creased and Canada's exports to parts of British Empire have increased. from $345,845,410 in 1922 to $540,441,011 in 1927 e actions ..eductions MICE=43:2192:1===.4=i=211C0181110-' IMAM Tariff Reaucti LIX .trditure Re+victims Ina 5, ! T �. r ets Increasedusiness The statement' is made that the Farmer group in the House is entitled to the credit for all the progressive measures in the sessions of 1926-27•. This cannot be true, as this group voted the Government out .of power, and it was .only after another general election, in which the present Government secured a reasonable majority, that these measures were finally passed. The late John W King, however, stood by the Govern- ment and these measures every time. Statements are being made that one nsillion dollars has been promised to Goderich harbor and that the national debt has not been reduced. Everybody knows them to be untrue. • This must be a reasonably good Government if those opposed to it have to resort to foolish statements of this kind. 1 The Conte Lgp t IS etween ' yyJ In GODERICH, WINGHAM, BLYTH, BRUSSELS and WROXETER there are 5,309 votes. BRICKER is campaigning as a U.tF• 0, who really doesn't seek votes in urban districts: Consequently he will be over 2,000 votes behind each of the other .candidates. In most of the TOWNSHIPS they will also each poll more votes than Mr. Bricker, so he cannot possibly. win. If you want to indorse the Government or support -its policies, vote HISLOP. AND INDORSE THESE POLICIES. ., AND STRENGTHEN . 4 ' A STABLE GOVERNMENT. '' AND 'SUPPORT r EXPANSION OF TRADE. RESULT OF ELECTION WILL BE HISLOP ��j 5,300V es ff����;.F�.at'.,,�i� 1 Tj�y�`I ��jjjj t��*'��,� a\'�q^ - . .. (�Q, ,t (� A�d�i�Y �(� T3},V �,.0'� "y e b . • • i a i a i i • • • • • • ♦ JLO��®0 �"•�•'dr�07 �� :� . .. • . . �. 7® Votes d 9 Support the Winn -r <.: d Support the Government NORTH HURON LIBERAL ASSOCIATION. ALEX. PORTERFIELD Secretary. GORDON YOUNG, President the mercy seat, which was the gold - 'en lid of the ark 'mercifully hiding the taw (the 'tables of the Com- mandnncnts) front the sight of Jeho-- vali. `•Atid the cherubim covered the ark and the staves thereof above. The staves were of acaela wood and pass ed through four, golden rings attach- ed, to the ark, being used to carry it from place to place. And the staves were so long that lir: rp1•,.',eirt 11'Ji9•n the ends of the staves were seen from there they are unto this day. That the holy plate before the ,oracle; but is, the tithe when the Book of Kings theywere not 'seen without. They;was written, and of course before the I reached to the entrance of the Most ,temple was destroyed when Janina, Holy Place and could be discerned` lent was captured by the Chaldeans. through tdi lankness by a priest min- There was 'nothinghi n 1n. the ark save e stcrng in the holy Place, but the the two tablets of stone which Mases darkness within the sanctuary pre- put there at Horeb. At Mt, Sinai vented their being seen by any wor- when the 'ark was formed and the shipper in the court outside, And, Law given by Jehovah When Jeho- ary after placing the ark in the inner chamber. That the cloud filled the house of Jehovah. This was the pil- lar of clou'tl and fire wherein Jehovah had led the Israelites during their forty years of wanderings'guiding their journeys and dlscomfitting their- foes. In this cloudy pillar the Lord Italked with Moses face to face, So that the priests could not stand to minister by reason of the cloud. • The light was too dazzling, the sense of awe inspired by God's manifesta- tion of himself was,too overpowering; the priests fell to the ground as Saul fell before the vision of Christ on the Damascus road. For the glory of Jehovah filled the house of. Jehovah. Solomon's Prayer. ' ! And the king, and all Israel with him, offered sacrifice before Jehovah. There is no true worship without sac- rifice ';The surrender to God of all! that one has and of all that one is constitutes the essence of religion. And Solomon offered for the sac- rifice of peace -offerings, which he of- fered unto. Jehovah, The peace-offer- ingsand thanks- giving, ins yore tokens of 'o a s g �joy d giving, as the burnt -offerings were E symbolic of repentance. Two and twenty thousand oxen, and a hundred land twenty thousand sheep. The por- tions to beburned of this enormous number of animals could not be ac- commodated c-comniodated upon the great brazen altar in the _court of the temple,: so that the entire court was consecrated for this occasion, and became a great altar. So the king of all the children 1 of Israel dedicated the house of Je- hovah. The feast, which ordinarily lasted a week, the people being sent to their homes on the eighth day, was on this occasion doubled in length to accommodate all that wished to sac- rifice, and relays of the people were Idrisntiss'ed.., after•. each., pf the two' weeks, on the eighth day. visiting with his another, has return- ed to Toronto, Messrs. West.Haugh Ivan Haugh and 'James .:Hardy left last Monday for the west, h[r, and Mrs. Andrew Wallace and, family have returned to Toronto after Holidaying with the, former's parents,, Mr. and Airs, I.)dv:,;i Wallace, Mr, John. Metcalfe is spending d few days in Toronto, Mrs. Thomas Weir is visiting with friends in Hamilton. Mr, and Mrs, Oliver Stokes ..spent Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Crawford, of. Milbank. Mrs, Lamb and son'John are visit- ing friends in Toronto, "DRUNKS" WILL LOSE PER- MITS FOR ALL TIME = V ere a man gets 'drunk and is fined ten dollars, or where a man gets drunk and his permit is cancelled by the judge for a -month, this board will see that his permit 'is cancelled per- manently, This board will not stand for drunkenness on permits •that are issued under authority of this board. In cases where complaint is made in any district or neighborhood against the, abuse of privilege by permit hold- ers,° these permits will be cancelled. We are uncompromising in this mat- ter." This statement was•, made by D. B. Hanna, chairman of: the Liquor Con- trol 13oard, Saturday morning, when asked about the number of permits cancelled for abuse, and the rumor from Ottawa that 25o 'permits had been cancelled there for abuse. "The statement is absolutely: with- out foundation, and the number of permits cancelled, based on approxi- mately 23o,00o issued, is infinitiesimal,"• said Mr, Hanna. .�-;:�•;�, ,�;.„� WROXETER The annual Harvest Thanksgiving service in connection with St. James' Anglican church wiil be held next Sunday, September 11th at 7 p.m. The . Rev. Mills, of Gcderich, will be the special ,preacher. All are wel- come. The Wroxeter school fair will be held on Tuesday, Septeinber i3th, The exhibits will be shown in the rink and the sports twill be held in the park; there will be games, foot races and other contests: There will be a booth selling ladies' aprons, a new feature. With the harvest over, everyone should attend and'anake the fair a success. Mrs. Omar Westell, of Kincardine, Miss Luella Campbell, of Windsor, and Mrs, R O. Hicks, of Detroit, vis- itedat the home of Mr. and. Mrs. D. C. Pope. Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Edgar and family motored to Toronto exhibition Thursday morning. Mrs. Herb., Patterson spent last week in Toronto. Mr. William Patterson returned home after a three weeks visit with his sister at Austin, Manitoba. The girls' softball team wen the silver clip at Goderich last Wednes- day, Some of those front town who went !to Toronto over the week -end were:. Mr. and Mrs, John R. Weld and Norman Hall, Mr, Thomas Ritchie, J. vY. Henry, Kerr Edgar, James Al- • len and Jhn Sanderson. Mrs. H. 13, Edwards and her daughters, Mrs. John Harris and two children and Miss Lucy Edrta'ls are visiting Mrs. Edward,' brother, ; Mr. John Earner, Mrs. Edwards is now residing at Niagara Falls, Tons Henderson, an old resident ui this place; met with a serious accident Friday night when he fell and broke a bone in bis hip. On account of. his advanced years it is 'all the moreser- ious. He was taken to the Fergus hospital 071 :Tuesday morning, Mr.. Stewart b1cNaugliton, of the second, line Turnberry, had the nnis- fortune to fall out of a mots to the flour, breaking his. ankle. He went to London Saturday morning to have an X -Ray taken. GLENANNAN Mr, and Mrs. William Wallace, -^. : who have been visiting with tlie:for•. mcr•'s parents, Mr, and Mr, David Wallace have returned to their home in North Carolina, Mrs. Walpole, iif Paisley, who has spent the past week with her siste, , hiss, Muir, his returned to her home, Mr, andltrrs, Harold Gilkinson, al- so Miss Nellie Gilkinson, spent Sun- day' with friends in 131uevale, Mr.„. George Muir,- who has been vale made a covenant with the chile ren of Israel, when they came out of the land of Egypt. Every time the 'ark'arkwas seen or thought of, the Jews were reminded of their release from Egyp- tian bondage and the awe-inspiring scenes :on Sinai, And it came to pass, when the priests were cote 'out of the. holy place. They 'came out of the sancttr- PRIZE LIST ADDITIONS Thomas Kew offers a shoppingbag' as prize for Special No. 37 to the person exhibiting the largest number - of entries in the Dairy and Provisions class. Special No. 4o—For the best pair of Chinchilla rabbits, $2,00, Special No. 4r --For the best pair of black or silver foxes, properly caged, 1st $2:5o, and 2nd $r.00, The following gentlemen also sub -- scribed money to the Agricultural Society but have not been credited with same in the printed list: George Spotton; $1o; Sheldon Bricker, '$10 Rola Grain, $5; Sendai? •• Phippen, $1; Wee Lee, $2; C. R. Wilkinson, $z G. H. Orvis, $2o; G. Phippen, $1; B. Cruickshanks, $2; G. T. Robertson, $5; J. J. Fryfogle, $5; John Johnson, $2; Herb. Campbell, $1; W. H. ,Dav- idson, $2; Fields C Co., $2; W. J. Brown, $5; W. R. ,Cruickshanks, $5; J. V. Breen, $4; J. W. Hanna, $4; George Patterson, '$2; Charles Swan- son, $z; G. W. Underwood, $2. Sev- eral others have given labor and loaned teams for work at the fair grounds. We will publish a list of• these later. Mrs, (I)r.) L A. Kilburn, •0f Ham - was the guest of Mrs. R. A, Currie this week. Miss Irene Ellacctt, of Kincardine, is home over the holiday, its !9B E&d We have our Fall samples for • MADE -TO -MEASURE SUITS and OVERCOATS. We can Hs take your order, make delivery el ra in ten days, and guarantee aryi fit. , • • Overalls, Smocks, Work Shirts, a 41.1.1 Pants and Vests—you will find i, what you want here—Peabody's, I� Kitchen or Haugh's are the pop- ular brands. ee ROOTS and SHOES—With M leather prices advancing, Shoes 1i will be much higher in price. We have them still at the Iow .- price. Fee China . and Crockery — Dinner a Sets, Tea Sets, or Clover Leaf br plain white in open stock.. CsIder Weather Our Fall and Winter OVER- COATS are now in. These Coats are made up in the lat- est popular styles and colors; all hand' tailored, and finished with the best of material, and are priced to compete with any. 191t WepaY the highest prices for !Nf produce. You save money both Mp ways by dealing here, • fAVE S sToRE 1 RO..... EM [IIit1111NII1M�lil'�1111�1111wIili1Ma1111�111�IilI�illl�illlMllll� , ,