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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1936-06-12, Page 2A"" li k;•��1, 'tS uronExpositor Established 1860 Feith McPhail McLean., .,editor. Published at Seaforth, Ontario, ev- ery Thursday afternoon by McLean Bros. Subscription rates, $1.50 a year in advaifice ; foreign, $2.00 a year. Single copies, 4 cents each. Advertising rates on application. Members of the Canadian Weekly Newspapers Association, Class "A" Weeklies of • Canada, and The Huron County Press Association. SEAFORTH, Friday, June' 12, 1936. Parliament Seventy Years Old ° The Dominion Parliament has be- come such a time-honored institution in the daily life of Canadian citizens that few, particularly the middle-, aged and older, ,realize that as age goes, the Dominion Parliament is not an, old institution at all. In fact, Parliament only celebrat- ed it's seventieth birthday on Tues- day of this week. It was on that date seventy years ago that the first Parliament of the Province of Can ada met at Ottawa. Tt marked- the union , of Ontario and Quebec and brought ,to a close the system of the rotation of Par- liament which had previously been held alternately in Toronto and Que- bec City. .It was in 1857, that Queen " Vic- toria chose Ottawa as the permanent capital of the Dominion and it was.... there that the first Parliament was opened by Lord Monck, who became the first Governor-General of, Unit ed Canada that had its birth with Confederation which came into be- ing in 1867, Only seventy years, but what a change in the Parliament of seventy years ago and the Parliament of to- day. What a change in the buildings and their equipment and accommo- dation; in the number and extent of government departments, and num- ber of civil servants. What a change in the amount of money deemed necessary to run the business of the country, and the amount of money deemed.rnecessary to -day. �a• What a change in the . personnel and the style of the members of par- liament. How did those old mem- bers legislate and prepare their ad- dresses without the assistance of private rooms and secretaries and stenographers, and no Hansard to copy their speeches out of? Wen, if we are to believe history, they made a pretty thorough job• of governing the new Dominion, con- sidering • all the handicaps and dis- advantages under which they. labor-' .,ed. Perhapsthey even labored under the 'old-fashioned idea that they were working for the ' advancement of their constituents and not for the advancement of themselves. That government was for all the people, and not for the few. ' Of course, we don't know these things, but history points that way, and facts have a way of 'crystalizing and standing out after a space of seventy years, and history records these old members served well-• their day and generation. But ours is a new day and a new generation, and our Parliaments and our Parliamentary members, if they have not much else with which to point with pride, still have their wo- men voters, their women members and Senators, and their beauty con- tests. I�. • Looping Into the Question of Coal Prices Announcement has come from Ot- tawa that Dr. H. M. Tory, former President of the University of Al- berta and a former President of the National Research Council, has been ► tl ,need to eondnct .an .inirestiga- ii to theeh price -':of anthracite coal AP- . Charged Canadian consul/1M. 0 tiler firs. been, a ete•in ratany:quarter's that AO cligtribution Of auy :fu f d1 ,yM a1 f av +!r 4pY7Fi4 cl"11j, "t7 r h „ 44. rfra'; r, rdl 4 1 I 1 ti M1 a,. A m- 'r" :• THE.IIURON EXPOSITOR anthracite coal has fallen into the hands of a strong monopoly, and Canadian consumers a r e paying through the nose for a commodity .Without which, in many parts of the country, they ebuld not exist during our Canadian .winters. And judging by the height of the , price to which coal has soared dur- ing even recent years, : there would appear to be some well founded evi- dence th .back up_ this belief. Anthracite coal, both in the States and the Old Country, is, apparently; as plentiful as it ever was. And with modern mining methods, it is being . . brought to the surface in ever in- creasing quantities, and` at a price very, little, if any, above what it ev- er cost to produce. With surer, faster °andcheaper transportation facilities, which are available to -day., why then the tre- mendous increase to the consumer? In the early days and up„Runtil re- cent Years, coal was only an auxil- iary fuel in Ontario. There was wood, and plenty „of it, arld the price of coal had to compete with the price of wood. But comparatively °cheap ,,as coal was then,r^.that was the• time the Coal Barons laid the foundations of their present colossal fortunes. That day, however, has passed. 'The wood has Elargely disappeared and coal is no longer either a luxury or an auxiliary fuel. It is an every day necessity, and as such, the rights of the people regarding it, should be protected. It . should be plainly understoo`d',” however, that the local dealers in coal are in no way responsible for the tremendous increase of the pro- duct they retail. In fact, these deal- ers are in as helpless a position as the consumers themselves, and in re- cent years have been held up to just as great an extent. The trouble lies higher up, and in appointing a commission to investi- gate the question of coal prices, the Domiliion Government has made a wise as well as a most necessary move, and one not made before it was time. • Really Too Bad, Isn't It ?. Ted Bisago, a thirty-one year old gangster from Detroit, was in the Essex County jail last week and Mr. Bisago was very sore at heart, and in a really bad way. Not at being a gangster, of course, nor from any qualms of conscience. The trouble went far deeper than that. Mr. Bisago's heavy heartedness descended upon him in a black cloud w !len he learned that at his destina- tion, which was Kingston peniten- tiary, where he was awaiting trans- port'ati6n, there were no moving pic- tures, ' no radios, and no prison bands. What a prison! Not lP4e the up- to-date dues he was ,so - used to in Jackson and other American cen- tres. No music, no pleasure, no noth- ing., Just plain prison, plain fare, and plainer work. • Too bad, Mr. Bisago! But we have a Parole Board, if you can work it. WHAT OTHER PAPERS SAY: Control Of.. Press (Peterborough Examiner) There is some reason to believe that Premier Aberhart of Alberta is 'beginning t+b' picture him- self in the rale of a dicitatoe.. In an address on . Sunday he expr+ess'ed the opinion that news- papers'should ''be licensed and 'regulated and there of (course he gave voice to the 'pet theory of every person: w'h'o has 'ever tried toplay a dictatorial part. The theory it tiha't the press should be under the thumb of those In authority and only allowed to air views that are approved of in high cireleee, Evidently Mr. Abel -hart would have in Alberta a "free" press as they have in Russia under 'Stal:imn, in Italy under Mu'sso'lini and in Germany. under Hitler, a pres's so rigidly controlled and regulated that 'it an -publish nothing that has not been checked ever and favorably pas's'ed Up- on by the powers-thatt-be. He would like to have control 'of the editorial and news policies bf the Alberta newsparpers so that none of them could commit the heresy of asking em'bairaasin.g questi'on's -about s'o'cial credit or publish the coni - plaints ' of eleeters who feel that it is high time some of the benefits predicted by the A.berr- harbians in .bhre^ last election 'began to make themselves, manifest. ' Alberta's epremnier is 'putting himself in an imnpessilble (pos'iti'on do acit o acting a ,govelrnftn'ent- ategulate,d .press. 'He should be big 8noufgrh to see ,that if :s'oeial credit is 'an' that he has claim - VI for it, no. newspaper critieisnn cane rlvrtevent its/ raffinate success. On the ro'tife'r hand it' should bre equally clear to (him that if his plan cannot be murine to work, theft trying to Ipre'reerb the prese from Iprabli thitrlg anYthing nf .'wora le to 4t +ir�l( not make, e' Slightest 'differelide. Years Agorae Interesting items picked from The Expositor(' of . fifty, and twenty-five years . ago. ; l ' From The Huron. Expositor of June 16, 1911 Dr. Irwin, of Wingham, has gone on a trip to the Coronation. The Council of the Towns'hi'p of 'Osborne have decided to build a new bridge across, Fish Creek on- Harrow .sideroad, (between concession 13 and 14. Mr. C. Gook, of the firm of Cook .Bros., Hensall, has treated himself to a fine automobile. We tan Bros., of Bayfield, are busy with the cement abutments for the new bridge, known,as Turner's bridge, near Varna. A. M. Campbell., of Constance, has been •suceessful in the recent .exam- inations at the Faculty of Education, Toronto; and has been appointed as- sistant is the Roden public school •of that city. •An all-night telephone service has been established In Exeter. T'he storm. 'of last Sunday blew a portion 'of the roof off the barn of. Mr. Allan Ross at Leadtbury, • Miss .Gillespie, daughter of Mr. James Gillespie, Seaforth, has just comipleted 'a very successful course at Toronto University. She took first -+class ho'ri+ors' and has been grant- ed the degree of 11%LA. iMr. Harry Pierce 'met with a pain- ful accidents at the clothing factory, Seaforth, when his foot caught in the elevator and he had '•bhe muscles in 'his ankle broken. Miss Edith Neelin, daughter of Mr. F. G. 'Neelin,-- Seaforth, has been ap- pointed superintendent of the Fergus Hospital. Mr. J. Harvey Cole/lough, of Clin- ton, and a former employee of The. Exposi'tcr, waa,'ordained ars..a deacon, Vin St. Alban's Cathedral, Toronto, on "Sunday last. The Seaforbh Citizens' Band have procured handsome 'new uniforms which consist of ,blue coats and caps with white trousers, . Mr. John Beattie, Sea'forth, has (rented /tlhe store in the Kidd block, now occupied by Mr. Alex. Wilson, and intends moving his variety stock into it. The fine.• new bank barn being. erected by Mr, Joseph 'Bedard, Drys- dale, was blown down and.eompletely wrecked. Mr. Jacob Haberer, the bee king of Zurich, is erecting 'an extracting h'ous'e, He has over 200 hives of bees. 'During tine storm on Sunday af- ternoon •last',the`fine barn of M'r. Gera. McTaggart; 'Grey . Township, was strwok by lightning and burned to the ground, together with a quantity of grain, hay, straw and a calf. During the same storm. Mr. !Rich. Robison had a narrow escape front being (killed. On. Friday '14 'r. Adam Gray !had eight cows killed by light- ning. (One day -last week as Mr. Robert Johnston was engaged in bricking a well, which he had dug for Mr. John Turner, of Seaforth, he became very nearly being suffocated by fioul ga'ss. e From The Huron Expositor of June 11, 1886 On Tuesday Morning of last week a number of the. -members of the county council on their way to God- erich, a number of ministers going to the same place, and a negro min- strel troupe were assembled on the platform of Clinton station, all wait- ing for a (tram. A large frame barn was -raised •on the Earn of John Whalen, 14th con., Cray, on Friday mast. The captains, ,were H. Stewaff and Chas. Hooten. Stewar't's side carne 'out 'victoroue. At the recent examina'tions•, at To-. i;ont'o University, Mr. J. D. Dickson, of (McKillop, passed his third 'year 'examination, and Messrs. T. M, Hig- gins and W, Prendergast passed the second year. A fine new sidewalk is. being laid down ion the west sidb of Main Street, .Seaforth, from Kidd's corner to Log- an's. There were 83 tickets sold at Sea - forth station on Thursday for the Wingham exoursion to Brantford. The Seaforth Band ace'ompanie,d the party., Mr. W. IM. Gray, of Seaforth, was appointed a 1ay•delegalte to the Gen- eral Conference of the Methodist Church, the meeting being held). in Goderich this week., Messrs. 'Laidlaw & Fairley, of the Central Grocery, Seaforth, have had a 'telephone placed in their store, Mr. Alf. Shaw, while painting at Dr. (Scott's house, en the' Chalk farm, fell from the top of a ladder to the ground but was not much injured'. Mr. John Saddler, of Staffa, who owns the saw and cider milds, has purchased the grist mill which is un- der the present ,management of the Raskin Bros. of Exeter, from Robert Webb, for the sulm sof $3,000. Mr. George Hess, of Zurich, has. .the contract to build a newtown clock 'for the Lutheran Chur'c'h in Tavi- stock. It is an immense affair as' the drat (plate will• be about 5% feet in circumiference and it will Cost about $600. The Blyth 'Bicycle Club took a trip to Manchester last 1{r'idra.y and did some fast riding), coming home in 30 minultles, a d'is'tance of six miles. Mr. T.h'onnas Roe, of MieKill'op, has a field of fall 'wheat, the stalks, of which will average over three feet six inches in length.' I Mr. J. Neal, of Elimville, in the Township ef•Uslborn'e,'had p'o'tatoes in his garden in full 'bloom on the asst of June. Mr, Henry Wesateott, of Usborne, has s'ol'd his farm which is situated on the 2nd con'cessi'on to Mr. James Emile, for 84,500.. Mrrs. Peter McTavish and Mrs. Hugh Slsn!pson left Brucefield for Kansas( on Wednesday' Witt. 'On Saturday 'last a tittle daulghter of ,1)/tr. Janis Shepherd, of Goderich, fell into a 'pail of 'hart mater and rotra os% is'eve'l�ely Staided. IS'he ,paos'sed bn Way On Wiedneet ay+r • 1"L eJ. yy r, "1 1 na, Y i gra, m 1 . n r t, Jf41 i D r t f t i{ ,is -1 t `'f n xl tr v f a • rl Ir Ir 4 .G I a 7 r Is,w - Canada's Ra. -Tway Centenary Wap !v. Jr. l; ' • JANE: I ,. 19$6, r 1. Til IG�t. gg51 Ali Fr tWl. y ,. ar i.l, til. r•., ij r,{ This year is Canada's railway Cen- tenary. On July' 21, 1836, Canada's first steam train was operated be- tween Laprairie 'and ,St. Johns, Q'ue- b'ev, over the Champlain and St. Lawrence Railway, the first link in the chain of railways which now con- stitute the Canadian National Sys- tem. The opening was made the oc- casion for a gala • celebration at which tri'bu'te was (paid by the leading citizens of Lower Canada to the founders of the Co'ntpany.. These far- seeing men. whose immediate object 'was the creation of a transportation link 'between Montreal and New York, were ,pioneers 'of Canada's .devlelop- • m'enft, But perhaps' even they could not visualize the vast country that would be built up as a result of • the introduction of the steam railway. The Sixteen miles. of line over which ,the "Dorchester,” Canda's first loco- motive, hauled^ the coaches carrying the distinguished) guests of the Com- pany, has developed into the great Canad'i'an National,, System; with 24,00Q miles 'of 'line sierving Canada fronet'he Atlantic to the Pacific, Tite drawing, depicting the start of the first train, is from a pa'in'ting by- Adam yAdam Sheriff Scott. A.R.C.A:, and -is 'reproduced by courtesy of the Royal Bank of 'Canaria. JUST A SMILE OR INV. : Freddy—Granadpa, did you •once have hair like snow? Grandpa --Yes, my boy. • • F c~eddy--W'eQ1, who shovelled rit off Casey: (`You're a hard worker, Dooley. How many hods of mortar nave you • carried up that ladder tp- d'ay? s Deader: "Whist, iiian! I'm Perlin' the :boss. I''v,e carried the same hod- ful up and down all ,day and he thinks I'm workin'!" • Efficiency Expert—I. fired the worst clockwatcher in your emiploy. Boss'--W'ho was that? Efficiency Expert --,foe Jones% . Boss—You infernal, no 'account id lot! 'He's my 'timnekee'pee. s .0 N D,A Y AFTERNOON • (By LAW Riwniitan,.GfodericI, Ont.) 0 Spirit of God, descend upon my heart; Weal- it from earth, through allits pulses m•ove;' Stoop to 'my weakness, mighty as Thou art, And make me love Thee as -I ought to lulv'e. Hast Thou not 'bid Me love Thee, God and King? All, all Thine owns 'soul, heart, strength and mind; I see Thy cross ----there teach my heart to cling: 0 let Irne sfeekeThee, and 0 let me find:: Amnon: - -�G, Croly. • S. S. LESSON .FOR JUNE 14, 1936 Lesson Topic -Jesus Crucified. Lesson -Passage—Luke 23:33-46, Golden Text—Romans 5:8. . If we read the account of the cru- cifixion of our -Ieord with the scene impres's'ing itself upon our minds and spirits es it should. at every reading, there comes up for answer the ques- tion why Jesus died. That has to be asked and answered by us all, before the Cross can have any meaning for us. For He died with; a purpose in His mind. He chose that road delib- erately, knowing there was death at the end of it. But why? St. Paul gives us this 'answer: "He dyed for all that they which hive should not live unto thenrtsetives" (2 Oar. 6:15). He died for all that we should stop living to ourselves' --Hie and His pur- pose should be the. centre of our lives. Most of us do live for our- selves, ,a good 'part of our time at least. We -nay, bf course, say that we live for aur children. But that is often living for ourselves. Family love can often be a very selfish thing. .As for the rest of life we should possibly defend this way of living by saying if we do not look after ours'elve's' and 'our interests, no 'one else id likely to .do it. If we do not fight for a place in 'the sun OT by the fire, we shall probably be left out in the eold. IS'o runs 'the popular creed. But if we book and .$hink a little more d'e'eply, we shall find that.the habit of living for 'oursellv'es'.is' the root of almost all the misery and evil of life. It is the habit of living to onse'If that destroys real happiness. A self-cen- tred 'life is like a vine trying to grow by twining round its own stem. The resullt is just a shrivelled heap of twigs . 'and foliage. That •was why Jesus said that if we would find our life we must lose it. The work of His Cross and Passion in our lives is seen in our stopping living to our- selves. A man might 'rescue us from &owning without making us willing to do the same thing for others. We Might be relieved and thankful, but just as selfish as before. 'Phis can- not be, With any salvation that Christ brings, For to be saved at all means to be 's'a'ved from, selfish living. There is power lin His dying., It is a myr- acle that He could love us at al.l. It is still more a mfiraele that on the I Gross He Could ,go 'on loving, if His love tax been; only a s'entimen't, Cal- vary would have killed lit. But His. dove shad been Only a Sienti'msnt, Cal - The 'meat is .that He can 'work this miracle 3n "tis,. The centre of life is. Changed. The force's. of our nature find 'a new 'channel. .'Our hearts find a new M'astter,e-:t( ;orrdtenlsed; from a ae'ri tfpn by Rev. Varies Reid, D.1)., in the British ,Wee4tiy')9 WORL' IntgIPXS Dr. Albert Schweitzer By Mercy E. 1MeCulloch z'Jllbert 'Schweitzer was born in Up- per Alsace on January 14, 1875, the son of an Evangelical minister. His "delightful childhofod," 'as he calls it, was spent with his .brothers and sis- ters in an atmosphere of culture and Tell glom When he was twenty -•one it wa deeply impressed upon Sehweitze 'that he had no right. to so happy life while so many about him were in care and suffering.. He must give something in return .for his happi nests. Facing this convidtion; cided. to live for science and art'unti he was thirty in order to devote him- self from that 'time to the direct ser vlice of 'humanity. He 'tried to hes in caring for neglected children an for tramps and discharged prisoners but felt he must work in an"abs'a lutely personal and independent ac- tivity." In 1904 he *ead an appeal by an Alsatian, Alfred. Boegne Prresiidept of the Paris Missionary So - tie*, , for the work in the •Gaboon, the northern province 'of Congo Col- ony. Dr. 'Schweitzer laid down the article, began his work •of preparation knowing that (his search was over. It was not, however, a simple mat- ter to answer this ca'l'l. He had to study medicine for six years, combin- ing lecturing,'preaching, 'organ-play- inlg and writing with a difficult course; and 'he had fairly to bombard the Paris Mierionary S'ocdetty to accept his services. lkb was not orthodox, did not conform; to their shibboleths. He offered to go to Africa at his,iewn expense, and with the aid of some 'German friends secured fund's to equip and carry en a hospital for two years. 1n June, 1912, Dr. Schwetizer mar- ried' Helen Breslau, and the follow- ing •F'ebr�uary they sailed for the Up- per 'Congo. 'C'ondi'tions were very 'primitive and uncomfortable. 13e - sides medical work he had to- plunge into planning and 'building. •Patients were soon streaming to seek hie eare and in the .alleviation of their suf- ferin:gs he floun.clf (keenest satisfac- tion. To see their relief compensat- ed 'hilin for all the disagreeable con- ditions, Work steadily increased a- mong whites and' blacks alike.' Many came miles by canoe en the :Rilver Ogowe for treatment. Then carne+a rude interruption. War broke Out, and the Alsatian doctor. and his wife were interned. "I felt after the war," he wrote, Tulse a coin that has rolled under a piece of furniture and rem'ai'ns there lost." . His second period' in Africa was front 1924 to 1927. The hospital was removed to a healthiee site and en - barged, making tit much more 'useful. "A Garden of Eden" was planted . to serve the ,hospital, as fruit trees. are not albarleinal in the forest. Papa.fa, m'angoe's, eoeoanute, plantains, ban- anas and many other priceless fruits and vegetables were imported from the West Indi'eS. Ito,1,9,29 he return- ed to Africa for this thirrd...periodl of personal service, colmrpleting his book ion, tlhe " `Mysticism sof 'St. Paul" on board ship. �`I wanted to be a doetor that I mritg+ht be able to work ;without hav- ing to tally," he said, Few are called sdbraordi,nary individual labor such as his. Because he caught a vi Ision' i�f the need in Africa, Albert' Scliw'e1tz'ei felt constrained to alter the litesditentire 1e'aVes his Peacef'u'l eo l te of ee peen in the County Paper 'Gold Medal Award Dr, W. -S'tugrt Stanbury, Patholo- gist at the Mpunta}n Sanitarium at ,Hamilton, who was attending then Ontario ,'Medical Convention at Lon- don during last week, joined JVifrs. 'S'tanbuiry and his two little girls at the hemle of hie parents here on Fig - day where they spent the week -end. Ifo was announced in the press on Friday that 'Dr. Stanbury was awarded the (Medical Association Golds Medal for his exhibit filmes liis re- search laboratory at the Sanitarium. —Exeter Timer -Advocate. s r' a. 1 P d r, "a„t.tl ,, rl Former Exeter Girl Dies in„Accident • Mrs. Eva Blair, aged 42, wife of 'Allan C. Blair, of Detroit, and a former resident of Exeter, died' sud- denly Saturday 'afternoon as the car she wad'drilvii•ng crashed into a ditch and a tree. Her husband and a com- panion are' in Victoria Hospital ser- iously injured. • Her two children es- caped. Mrs. Blair was. formerly Miss 'May •Chaddock, daughter of the late James :Sha:ddock, at one time proprie-• tor of the old Mansion House, corner of Main and Huron Streets. Mrs. Blair was driving the car when some- thing went wrong and the car took to: the ditch. Her two children, by a former malrri'age, 'Dorothy 1VfcMullen, aged 13, and Marion IMcMu'llie.n, aged 11, were in. the rear seat and escap- ed without injury; Two years ago Mrs. Blair, moved .from 'London to Detroit: Exeter Times -Advocate. . Cane, Chair or Framed 'Picture ' In the early hours of the session: • of the county council, the question was raised as to how Wardens' ser- vices could he Most fittingly recog- nized. 'Gold -headed canes ,were look- ed upon as so much exegete. baggage by some Of The mernhers, . others thought a reclining chair__trauld. help former Wardens to enjoy their re- spite from toil, while hanging their picture, in the ctounty building was considered by others as a mark 'of distinction, and an 'adornment to that - historic pile. The question was laid over until ether affairs had been ar- rangede-Godierich Star.. Father of .Local Boy Killed in,Belfast ,George (Booth, a s young man work- ing on the farm, of Mr. Roy Rundle and who is well known in Goderich, ;r'eceiv'ed ward of the passing of his father ;in •a hospital in London, .Eng- land, on Monday. Death 'centre to Mr: Booth as a result' of an auto accident that occurred in Belfast last Wed-- nes•dey, and in which the • deceased . was seriously injured. -.. Goderich. Star. ... Guernsey Cattle Go to Beamsville Hugh Hill recently delivered to Garfield Rouse, a number of Guern- sey cows., which are the first GOern- seys being gathered together to foram a herd far 'Mr. Rouse, 'Who was until recen'.ly a Holstein breeder at Beams v'illereGoderich Star. Celebrate Golden Wedding Mr. and ,Mrs. A. L. Trick, now of London, "but former well known resi- dents of Goderich Township, celebrat- ed' the fiftieth anniversary of their wedding on '•Saturday, May 30; at the home of 'Mr. and Mrs. F. Townsend,. Hillview Farm, Tuckersmith. About eighty -friends and relatives fron . Au-. burn, Goderich, Dungannon, 'Sea - forth, Clinton, Landon, Londes'boro and Hamilton called during the af- t'ern'a•on and ertening to wish them. well.on this occa_'ion:=Cdintton News - Record. Quilt On Exhibition School No; 6, Tuckersmith, of-' which Miets. Edna Jamieson is teach- er, has a quilt on exhi'biti'on in the Agricultural Representative's Window this week, which was made by the pupil's and is being sold for Juvenile' Red Cross work. Lt is a nice do'oking quilt.—Clinton News -.Record:. .. Schultz - Erb A Iv'ery happy and. interesting ev- ent took place on the Bronston Line, Hay Township, en Thursday, May 28, when 1VLiss Bene Erb, only daughter of Mr. and ,Mrs. Mosses Erb was un- ited in (marriage to 'Mr. -Chris. Schultz, sen of Mr. and Mins. Noah Schultz, of Milverton. The ceremony Was performed by Bishop Chris•. Schultz, of Poole, 'at the A. M. Church near Blake,. Miss Emma Schultz, • sisters bf the groom, and Mr. Gordon Erb, Miss Mabel 'Swartzentrubber, cousins of the bride, and Mr. -,,john Schultz, brother of the groom, at- tended the 'bridal party, The bride was dressed in white crepe with ac- cessories to match:. ,.Following a wedding dinner, at the 'bridle's. home, which was served 13 a number sof rel- atives and friends nuxnibering about two hundred, the young couple heft,. on a wedding trip to Ne.v York iState. After their return they will reside on the Bronson Line.—Zurich Herald. .Falls Into Pit William 'Codl]ins had -It nasty ex - 'patience last Saturday night when he fell into the nit for, .greasing cars in the P. Scott Barr garage. Mr. Col- lins had been. eat in the garage and wad about to pass into this front part of the building when the, not noticing the (pit, dropped' into it. Dr. W. E. Pridh'am found that his arm ^rias bad- ly bruised, and.s there was a small lac- eration on the soalrpr-.Mitchell Advo- cate. life in his beloved Stttassbufrg Uni- ivlersirty, renounce 'the )organ; his cherished interest, and relinquish the thought of independence. Like Ab- raham, he was' spared the sacrifices'. He etuniversi- ties, lectures rs 9 now i ve n many un'a ties,. his organ concerts are enthusd- astiealdy welebmed, - thmidngh concerts and writings he liia:s regained finan- cial independence. He has mapped out a wide programme for 'himself to take his share in the revtollt against thie s'piirit of thoughtlessfies:k' and ma- Itetrialism .in this age; and to help to biting- deliverance from some' of the vworlyd'a.' inteerg and hewonders if this 'i $ .twill hold out to aecoun- plds'h ally' isi afi;ns,--.'(Condensed from `Tho Misueinti.`y :Monthly), E.EAi 4N 6+ .rr'(tty:f„14<x tyf[„tuyY.„ 4 y ` • r • • a. • P ,. • • •