The Huron Expositor, 1931-05-29, Page 2"�
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4+r , ,' at a � i 0 , .r e'BJ�.g had, caught In the distance til i
clank of swords, the tread of hurry
r rl, a5 ; a ing frotatsteps, Ole 1:11 -suppressed to
,"', 1 vault of an � adtvancin'g cro; _d. :Ani
�Ji : Y40 6verl as Jesus! s'p0lie flue ritar him
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appeared,
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a �; - to his, oanfederates than the one h"
1.` 'should 'kiss was the one'to, be seized
t lily eat North American sill in its Pressing forward to plant a kiss of
the t`yacivd cheep, he was met ;with
"Judas, bbtrayestt thou the Son a
*, , WO-st delicious forms! Made into Manwith a kiss?"
"Lord, shall we smite with tht
kellogg's Corn Flakes and enjoyed by , sword'? And, one `4f ahem s'rote tht
servant of the highs priest and cut of
Il10re than 2,000,000 people every his right ear. Jesus, turning to the
soldiers who were holding him, said
Jay. Here's to wholesome "Suffer ye thus far," and in one las
. act of miraculous mercy touched ani
healed the wound.
cor
To the chief priests and elders, an
leading l out
of the bemple guars
wh�q carniae out from theback groin+
after his capture, he said: "Have y
11 come out as against a robber wit]
sword' and, staves? When I was dail;
with you in the temple ye did no
111 1 aof
stretch out your hands against me
But this is your hour, and the po'we.
of darkness." "Then his disciples al
— ... them"--eventhe fiery Peter, even
the loving John, -"forsook him ani
0-. 0lediJ0 fled."
Jesus was now absolutely alone it
J the p'o'wer of his ele'me'nts. At tht
<t, CORN CORN command of the tribune ,his hand,
were tried behind his back, and form
FlFLAKES ing a close' array around him, th{
'. idol Roman soldiers.. fo'll'owed and sur
a� rounded by the Jewish servants, ler
`w "" - * Always oven -fresh in the patented him once more through' the night, ov
innenseal waxtite wrapper er the Kedron, and up the steep cit;
slope beyond it, tot the palace of th"
high priest."--fCondenised from Canof
Farrar's Lifeof Christ.
SUNDAY AFTERNOON suffering. Yet he should have glad- %11
$y Isabel Hamilton, Goderich, Ont.) ly shared thein sympathy; it helped -----,
him hV this hour -of darkness to feel WORLD MISSIONS
Th wa not mine, O Lord that ,they were near, and ,that those
y y f , were nearest who loved 'him best. Stay Honda active in local
However dark e w here, he said to the majority, wwhila his home district a politics ii
Lead me by Thine awn hand, I go there and pray. 'Leaving them ,and by hi
Choose out the path for me. to sleep on the damp grass, each friend's t, became a candid-ateuesi for phi
.wrapped in his outer ga=rment, he took new Diet, fought the question decided
tl
Nat mine, not mine the choice with - him Peter and James and Jghn, in his own conscience and decided ti
ender the Methodist ministry. Aftef
In things .or great or small; and went about a stonesthrow farther.
Be Thou my Guide, my Strength, But soon even resident 'of the Methodist the .society of these a time in the pastorate, s was nada
My Wisdom, and my All, chosen and trusted ones was m'o're than pt Episcapa
Horatius Bonar. He could bear. A grief beyond utter- College in Toy'k'o. He was after
once, a struggle beyond• endurance, a wards elected first bishop of the new.
PRAYER horror ,of great darkness' overmaster- ly-organized )Methodist church, com'
We confess our Father that we are ed him. "My soul," he said, "is full pe=ed .of is three former churches, bhf
of anguish, even unto death. S Methodist Episcopal, Methodist Soutl
slaw to learn the true meaning of life g � fay and Canadian Methodist. After fivf
and of Thy plan for us. Thy mercy here and keep watch." Reluctantly years of strenuous toil superintend'
and patience acre our spa Help us he tore himself away from their sus -
Pa Y• F ing a d'i'ocese which covered the ,hold
to wait patiently Thy guidance. Amen. taining tenderness and, devotion, andof Japan proper, and the Japanese
retired yet farther, perhapsou't of settlements in Korea and Manchuria
S. S. LESSON FOR MAY 31, 1931 the moonlight into the shadow. And he died in the harness, literally wear'
there, until slumber overpowered them ing himself out for the sake of the
Lesson Topic—Jesus in Gethsemane. ,they were conscious of how dreadful
Lesson Passage—Luke 22:39-54.was that paroxysm of prayer and church. His last 'public ap'pe'arance
through which he passed. was at the-ordinationelservice' at the
Golden Text—Luke 22:42. suffering
Jesus and the eleven disciples left Conference held Na'ga'saki in the
"Abba, Father, all things are :pas- spring of 1912, too preside at whirl
the upper room and, leaving the city sible unto thee; 'bake away this cup he rose from lids sick bed and came
:behind, they went to the Garden of from me; nevertheless, not what I to the church. No one present car
Gethsemane which is about half a will, but what thou wilt." And that ever forget the 'solemnity of that oc•
mile from the city walls. prayer in all its infinite reverence and
�. pary cession, and least of all the young
"Jesus, knew that the awful hour of awe was heard -0 that strong crying men who that dray received from thin
His deepest humiliation had arrived, and those tears were not rejected. And authority to preach the word ,and tc
Pain in its'acutestt sting, shame in the after time -victorious indeed, but rule in. the 'Chureh.'of God. Soon af•
most overwhelming brutality, all tho weary almost to fainting, like his an- ter there fell a true "Father in Is•
burden' 'of the sin and mystery of cestor Jacob, with the 'struggle of rae,l," "The saintly Honda," "The 'St
mans existence in its apostasy and those supplications --the came to seek John of the C'hri'stian Church in Ja•
fall=-t>his was what he must now face one touch of human support and hu- pan," These titles are indicative of
in all its most inexplicable accumula- man Sympathy from the '.chosen of the character of the man. — Frorr
tion,, But one thing remained before the chosen—his 'three apostles. Alas! Fruits of Christian Missions in Ja'
the actual struggle; the veritable ag- he found them sleepi'n'g. He said un- pan.
ony began. ,Hie had to brace his body, to them; "Why sleep ye? Rise' and 61
to nerve his soul, to calm his spirit pray, lest ye enter into temptation."
by prayer and solitude to meet that While they slept Judas had, been busy. HELPING VOCATIONISTS
hour in' which all that is etvil in the More than two hours had passed since
Power of Ervil 'should wreak its worst from the lighted chamber of their Holidays were coming and .Doreen
upon the innocent and holy. And He happy communion he had plunged in- had made no plans. Everything wa=
must face that hour alone; no human I to the night, and those hours had been up in the air. One day she decided
eye must 'witness, except through the I very fully occupied. :Already, as Jes- to make' enquiries for herself and
twilight and shadow, the depth of his I us was awaking his sleepy disciples, girl friend, so :she telephoned a
number of resort places. Thanks to
Long Distance, it was easy for the
girls to find a desirable place.
'a
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NN0 matter where your home may be, you can
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Why be without this modern convenience any longer"
The Emco bathroom fixtures and complete
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For homes without running water, if in reach
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11
Lower prices and Hydro Electric Commission
Purchase Plan put it within reach of all. See the
( dealer named below, or write us.
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WHY ROUMANIAN QUEEN
VISITED UNITED STATES
If anyone is curious as to the rea
son Queen Marie of Roumania visit
ed the United States --and incidentall
Canada—a few years ago he shoul
read the series of articles which Kon
rad Be'rcovtict is writing for the Out
look. If he does not like Queen Mari
he should certainly read them, fo
Mr. Bercovici does not like her eithe
and contrives to give H1er Majest,
many a nasty knock. Our own vieti
of visiting monarchs is our own vie"v
concerning gift horses. So long a
they come that is enough. As re
gards Queen Marie's visit to thi:
continent the memory that remain,
most poignantly with us is that a
the banquet arranged for her in Buf
falo, Mayor Schwab was not present
This fact was dinned into us and al
other radio listeners by the announce,,
who seemed to think that no banquet
even that graced ,by the presence of
royalty, could be complete without thi
presence of Mayor Schwab. We, have
more radical ideas on this subject
and would never miss Mayor Schwal
from any banquet,
At .the heart of the Bercorde,
articles is the firm conviction; of the
author than Queen Marie is a bad
lot. He more than hints at scandals
which would have justified her hus'
band in appealing to the divorce
court. Her name for years has been
coarsely linked with that of Prince
Sbtirbey, and Mr. Bercovici is so fat
removed from being a gentleman that
he doe's not hesitate to quote' Marie's
own daughter; the Queen of Jugo-
slavia, with remarking, "Why does
mother promenade that Miss Shtitbe'y
over ,the world?" this :being a some-
what nom -sisterly jab at the pater-
nity -of the Princess Ileana. Such
gossip is ill-natured to say the least,
and certainly should not be repast^d
in public. Fortunately the morals of
crowned heads is not a matter for
which we have any responsibility,
and we pass on to more congenial
subjects. ,
Its seems that Queen Marie hates
the present King Carol and did all
sbe could to poison the mind of King
Ferdinand against :him', Her aim
was to become one of the regents of
Roumania when death removed her
husband, who was dying of cancer
and further undermining his health
with liquor at the time the American
visit was decided upon. The 11t a-
tianu and Shtirbey groups ;vara .in
control of affairs, and they had not
admitted Witrio to the full poetner-
sbip she had• expected when the
ma0hiisattiow' egathst Carol had s,ue-
moded ill iittduclog -bifti to, renounce
the sureetdo;t1 So the, id ofturred
to cher that if she could to tlLe
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k �• , y, ', least private position, and the service T "', ` i , .
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I y' a and have our living .TOM secluded „
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R ' from the street and facing such lithe ; ,
garden a's we may have. ;
' '- -" This Pias a double advantage. There ,, a" :,i, r r �& A "fit 'r' `" w'y
M Aa 4ry
ctvet,,.'xhe world Kruschen Salts .is no reason for placing the garage at ai
Is app ,ipg to girls and women who 'the back in a separate building. It ,e r .
0 strive, &i'an attractive, free -from -fat means that there must be a drivewity, y
ol
Hgure that cannot fail to win admire- which of necessity cuts down on valu- +
tion. able spaee,sand involves serious prob- p
doriHere's the recipe that banishes fat lems of heating in winter. How much where the atii
' and brings into blossom all the natural g
, attractiveness that every woman more sensible, .'surely, to place the
' possesses, garage on the street side of the 'house
Every morning take one - half and make' it part of the housg itself, used to be 11 I .
teaspoon of Kruschen Salts in a glass If the kitchen is also at the' front, .
of hot water before breaiffast. there is no necessity for a service a! -
i Be sure and do this every morning ley.
for " It's the daily dose that takes off In considering new materials avail-
[ the fat." Don't miss a manning. able to -day, one is, struck and inspir- CYPROC makes
i Kruschen daily means that every by their variety. The natural ma-
t particle harmful poisonous waste matter terials, such as wood and stone, are ' L'
and edfro acids and gases are rapidly the
����
ge .
expelled from the system. F Y giving way to the products of
I At the same time the stomach, liver, the laboratory. From an architectur-
kidneys and bowels are toned up and al point ,of view these synthetic ma-
; theNa pure, fresh blood containing tenial= will be vastly superior; steel
Nature's six life-giving salts is carried can never crack or warp; stone can BIGGER HOUSE inside the same four
• to every organ, gland, nerve and fibre crack, but not properly prepared con- walls sounds impossible of accomplishment
of the body, and this is followed by erete. --BLit it only SOd1ndS that way. t " that Kruschen feeling" of energetic y y .
health and activity that is reflected in In addition to these, however, there •
are all the various varieties of stain- Gyproc is a fire-resistant wallboard made from
bright eyes, clear skin, cheerful vivacity yP
f and charming figure. less -steel alloys, which are so decor- gypsum rock. It comes in sheets 4 to 10 feet long,
ative and so hard wearing. 4 feet wide and / of an inch thick. It nails and
There is, for example, a certain
alloy of chromium, nickel and iron, cuts just as easily as lumber and with a minimum
United 'States and induce' American which is stronger than carbon steel. of waste. It is used for making inside walls,
` bankers to float a large loan for her when polished, which it may -be to a ceilings and partitions.
country she would return on a wave mirrorlike brilliance, it will resist for
` of popularity that would mak3 her Years the corrosive action of water, It has structural strength, insulation value, is
•the chief person in the land. So far atmosphere and acid. "It can be fin- draught and vermin -proof and costs very little.
as our comtpxehension is concerned, ished in a matte silver, which is most
t the idea is a vague and woolly one attractive for exterior fittings,, or in Gyproc that does not burn is exactly the material
I but it is clear enough, to Mr. L'.r- its polished form it can -be used in the to use for it needs no decoration when panelled
covici, who, however, as we have interior in a thousand ways — sink yet is an excellent base for Alabastine, Gyptex
already remarked, appears to b an lining, laundry chutes, or the more or wallpaper.
indifferent specimen of gentleman decorative purposes, such as lighting ,
and ready fto believe almost anything fixtures and furniture.
ufArimental to the When people g Get a Gyproc direction sheet from your dealer
Queen of Ron- P P e are proposes
a housg, or write us for the FREE booklet, "Building and
'mania. The happy thought of Marie and the architect proposes som�hing g
seemed to coincide with the happy a little original and different from Remodelling with Gyproc". 376
' thought of a Washington miIlionai:.e the usual, they are apt to take fright. GYPSUM, LIME and ALABASTINE CANADA LIMITED
• who asked her if she would consent Gradually; .however, they are •begin- Paris U
' to travel to the United State's to ning to realize that if their houses Ontario
' inaugurate a library. All her ex- are to be improved, they must be pre-
penses-and the expenses of her en- paredto jettison some of the old ideas %eNLV�� ��
tourage were to be paid. The queen and ideals, and some progress is b"'• (�(�/j D
accepted, and sailed for the United ing made.
States.
It is with no feeling of mortifica- 0
tion and disappointment that Mr. TAKING THE FALL
Bercovici announces that so far as
the loan was concerned, the visit The chief concern of a person un -
was afailure. Troubles and mss- familiar with the life of a circus per -
understandings attended the tour. former usually runs to an insatiable
When the misunderstandings' were curiosity concerning our fear of fall- 1 • 4 s s
removed their place was taken by ing. The question necessitates a qual-
ever uglier understandings, the chief ified answer. We fear falling, but we For ode !
re which was that Queen Marie was are not afraid we are going to fall.
ready to sell the ro-ya.1 name to the We know we're going to fall, and all Geo- A. Sills & Son 's' » • 6ifiorthip Ont.
highest bidder, Her signature and we can da about it is so to prepare
picture blo ageuied in newspaper and ourselves that the results will be as
magazine pages testifying to the negligible' as passible.
merits of a dozen commodities from
By bumps and bruises, we learn to to become the progenitor of the law- they persist in the practise." But in
fountain pens to facial creams. ,She take more bumps, bruises and often vers' merchants and politicians who justice to them they appear to have
signed a contract with one news- years, so that were to rule Canada Tong after they drunk large quantities of other liquids
signer syndicate for the one
broken bones in later had been buried.
we may avoid death or permanent in- which were more congenial to the
right to publish her comments upon jury. Those eventualities are the only Mr. H. R. Rutherford, of the, Mail stranger from Scotland, though more
two major accidents of the
American affairs. Then she signed an j perform- and Empire, and a man of more dog- than once he 'had occasion to pro -
equally exclusive contract with an- en's life. They stop the act. Any, ged nature than the writer of this col- nounce unfavorably of the way a meal
other syndicate for the same pnv- thing else, even months in the hos- umn, has exhumed from the Ontario was cooked and served and the quality
ilege. She made dual undertakings Historical Society's papers and re- of the liquor that accompanied it.
withphotographers. One of the s n- piles, is unfortunate, but not di=es- q F
Y pious. ports the diary of one of these p'io- Verily, a heart breaking task had been
dicates was -'about to have the law of The somersault forms the bulwark veers, Rev. William Proudfoot, who laid upon this man of God. His ob-
her gracious majesty when a cable o f came to Canada in 1832 from Edin- servations on natural history were not
summoned her home. protective falling—that plus the burgh, as la Presbyterian missionary. always -accurate' and when he first
This cable, though it lei=s giving of ground for an instant to y'
ppainted break the s F y After considerable roving he settled saw fire flies he supposed
peed of impact. Ever them v be
her, helped her out of a most em- on a farm near London where he died the product of inflammable air evoly-
muscle of a erformer, in falling, be- P'
barrassing position. The American comes am instinctive s spring, necessary in 1851. We doubt that he liked Can- ed from putrescent vegetables, Plants,
people showed a repulsive, republican to the throwing the body into a ada much alth'augh 'he was not blind he observes sapiently, give out this
tendency to laugh at her. The tes- to some of the natural loveliness, kind of air linin
somersault, aflip-flop, a slide or any- g the night and eels;
timoni'als had been slightly overdone. which even the pestiferous activities ""Of course it cane
thing else which can be used to make Qt be wholesome
The matter of the menaces trunks of the Methodist could not obscure. to stay in such al country at such a
which might hatve 'been seized to it a grazing fall instead of a straight In view of the opinion he held of season." We can only hope that
satisfy a court judgment, smash. when his days o c g
gment, since she the Methodists we are inclined to
was simply a There is another tremendous factor Y' I incudo ricin were
p y private visitor to the—that of the circus person's lifelong the day of church un on. living
We do nort done and he was able a turn to the
United States and not immune front knowledge of timing. During various farm he had bought, he found there
bailiffs, had become newspaper o - falls I have been able u serve an know whether in his mind the many some of the compensation that Na-
-sip. There had been an undignified entire region beneath me decided immoralities, which he reports to have ture will invariably 'pour like healing
squabble with one railroad which been practiced in the community at into the wounds of those who love
had declined to provide Her Majesty which way I wanted to roll, noticed that time were linked with the spread
with -a train and insisted upon being objects to avoid, and even turned in of Methodism, but we think it at least savage wilderness as the Upper Can -
paid for transporting the royal troupe. probable. ada of 1832.
The cable she hoped for would have by which to go n an 'opposite direr- After a visit to Buffalo which
changed all this; for it would haroe' tion from that which night mean my alarmed 'and disgusted him he grud
death. g -
announced the death of King Ferdin- ingiy admitted that perhaps Me'tho- -
and, and the American nation wouldSeveral years ago at the Colie'sum dist revivals were the hope of the
have overwhelmed the stricken widow in Chicago, my father 'and the French Yankees. Nothing short of wholesale
with sympathy, instead of pelting her boxer' Georges Carpientier, were in conversions could make -any discern- •
with ridicule. But the cable simply audience.and I wanted to do a par- ible mark in their masked wickedness.
said that the king was very ill and titularly good act, with ahair-rads- But Methodism in Canada was some- '
ing swan dive for the finish. In this thin Don't
wanted her to go 'home. .So she went, g to be checked, and he reports
and 'there discovered that her enemies I plunge straight down from my that in the course of a visit to imal-
h'ad planned to trapeze and continue thus until with- ■
ahiae Swat Flies
F get her there in time near St. Thomas, he fell in
to prevent her return as the mourn -11n
about two feet of the net. Thea,, with a man who defended the Metho-
ing,revent her return as the mourn-11ning, heart -broken widow, who might with a quick twist, I jerk my head dist doctrine. "Of course, be was and stain your wails.
under me land on m shoulders and �.
have appealed -fatally to the more ' Y soon put right; adds Brother Proud- Egg up Aeroxon. A
bounce' upward in a forward somer- foot wider and longer sentimental hearts of the Rouman- grimly. He noted with eras- ger rib-
sault. 'So, with my urge for a good bon is coated with the
dans. Since one of these enemies Aeration that wherever Methodism
seems to have been Shtirbe'y we won- act, I drove my trapeze st'e'adily high- seemed most greatly to flourish there sv'c-test of glue that
er, until the absolute limit was reach- existed the will not dry. Good for
der how Mr. Bercovici can believe the ed. Then I shot over the bar, curved greatest indifference to 3 weeks' service.
scandal which corrected the two his own preaching=. lHle was puzzler.
in the Lair and straightened into tho
names, bulletlike desce'ntt to the net. Two feet by this anomaly, and said that it well At ai„$, ®meso. and
- above it I jerked inward' for the for- either that he did not preach well hardsone 4rc ■tares
enough or that they did not care for sore �igonts
ward somersaulting position. struck Scriptural statements. The idea does a NEWTON A. HILL'
THE HOUSE OF TO -MORROW the net—and went straight through! not seem to have dawned on him that 5slrontat.E.
Structurally the houses in which we It bad rotted. I was, at the most, the People being Methodists were Toronto
Pres -
live to -dray have changed -but little eight feet from the ground, and in a probably less inclined to become Pres -
since the days of position which meant my death. In byterians overnighty
y Queen Elizabeth. that eight feet I je'rk'ed out of ,the or , than if the had
The styles of the ,past were excellent been Chaktaws or other heathens.
in ,their day; but this, most emphatt ward somersault inn,to a backward one. Against such granite Rev. Proudfoot
dressy, is not their day. lit on rn'y feet, instantly turning an- continued ineffectually to chew.
Far hundreds it yearn it has been other and a third and a fourth, swuhg He was naturally shocked • at the
considered impossible, in temperate into a succession of roll-overs and lax Sabbath observance of those days. �n
p F came n my feet for my bow, absolute- The people seemed to regard Sunday I AV CAITCHER
climates, to build houses with flat f
roofs, because the weight of accumu- b uninjured, It was a L'on'g moment as •a day for rest and recreation rather
laced snow 'during winter was too before the audience could applaud. than for religious meditation and the Gets the fly every time ,r
great for them to bear. With steel performance of holy rites. They fish- --i
construction it is ,perfectly possible to -ed and hunted, giving little thought
have 'a flat roof and so provide our ONTARIO MISSIONARY OF A to hell fire. He shrewdly observed '
house with enormously greater space. though, that they were probably bet- A
Land in this country is becoming CENTURY AGO ter when engaged in* these impious
increasingly expensive, particularly exercise's than if they were merely
near great cities; people are building It is perhaps not news to be told lounging 'about the corner roads, idle
their houses with less and less garden that Upper Can da was no but alert for an transient deviltr&eat
g FP � picnic Y y.
space around them. Here the flat ground for missionaries a hundred He tells soinething about the diflicul-
Deal"
roof comes in conveniently, Instead Years ago. They were ill paid; they ties of travel which, however, were
Df having a tiny garden which is ov had to work like navvies; and their somewhat ameliorated by the presence n
arshad'owed by the' :building around it, whole life was spent in surroundings of taverns there being 20 house's of V. pleamlomm
we can put our garden on :the roof. that must halve varied from the un- call along the road between Toronto
It •has always been the custom to congenial to the odious especially to and 'Hamilton. He tells us --though
place the" living rooms facing the those who had been educated in the he really doesn't need to --about theO8
street, in the most overlooked and
Old Country and left their comfort- Peculiar miring quality of Ontario
able homes there to toil with the un- mud and describes one 50 -mile wallc 1 50 . s�
enlightened Canadians. • Nor did they in the month of March. Other z1 eans •r
have the lure that brought the 'pov- of conveyance bad tbraken down and
®KBE rw erty-stricken or landless Englishman rather than disappoint the congrega- You get in .
to this country. They were not es- tion which was awaiting shim the 'WRIGLE S.
*r caping from a social sy�s•£e'm which sturdy minister tramped the distance. the most that
CtiilaNOn Healthy He mentions one stretch of road which chewing gum
y was galling or even intolerable to men was so 'bad that it took him seven offers.
When thfey"ze "off colour" give of independent spirit. On the contrary Try a package I SQ
them Dr. Carter's add vegetable they were surrendering an honored hours to walk ten miles, today and Bee
Little Livid" :PM* 'Safe, acting and superiga, 'state in society for a A visit to Niagara Falls was mar- hcwvgoc�d goad
gently on the bOweis and liver, lowlier one, in ,which they had to red by the contemporary appearance .gum eon be.
th�cq soonbdogbackstridesand earn any respect that w$s paid them, of a horde of curious Americans. The The day'swotk
highs ok*t heamy young- They were not spurred on to e,adure falls themselves disappointed him' and g o e•s nit a 01h,
stens s�'tt6ow. the discomforts of to -day' in exchange he asserts that there are better or at east with
for the security of 0 -Morrow. Theo► least more d cornus falls in Scotland, WR0M
%5c 75c red' , ootabl' 'at , Cotalin. o � ''` + '. '
cis could n'ot expect to 'bscoine, powedA Y Amon the quaint s�,sx ` G x , t°t� .
natitt>e cugtotns which . , 1`
mac. S 'rot though 'at least ons of laYiew,• Bishop � Mr. proudfoot x
,Strachan, became ono of the most in, ,. Observed, in Canada was that of drink- .
r +� ifueittial mien in _ lbws Co7tinst, '�"1le edea large quantities of cowltte+r" r.,, ]
C 'brigthtest futitlre far nny' of thonx waa • and in 801te of the known danger
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