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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Goderich Star, 1929-03-07, Page 4PAGE FOUR
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THE GODERICI'I STAIR
•s�•rJ'' L
#1•1#1....
a
t
• ADVANCE SHOWING OF
New Springy Coats, Dresses
and Millinery
0 J' are cordially invited to attend our colorful first showing of the new styles for Spring,.
-One accepts with assurance the styles which we display. They are correct in• evert re.
spent, finest fabrics.and xnoderatd prices,
�Tew
SPRING
DRESSES
We invite you to come
in and see .our new •
lines of Ladies' and
Misses' •Dresses for
Spring wear.. They
comprise the very
latest styles and ma-
terials. • .Prices moder-
ate.
LLINERY
THE ' NEN/V. . COATS
Our line of new Spring Coats come
in a wide range of materials and shades
and they are popular priced.. Materials
of Bottolnly all wool Tricotine, Broad—
cloth and Tweeds, shades of navy
black, sand, fawn, blue, grey, etc., beau-
tifully lined with flowered silk and plain
crepe -de -chine, trimmed with • fur of_
muskrat, opossum,mole and broadtail,
various sizes from 15 to 44.
THE NAVY TAILOP%E'D COAT
IS POPULAR
Their chic is classic and their lines
are flattering' and their usefulness will
outlive many seasons to conee. Reason-
able prices. Developed in finest fab-
rics, braid bound and all beautifully
bound. Priced from
$ 15.00, u
Here you. 'will see myriads of shapes --Hats admirably
and individually suited to the facial contours of the various
ages. A. smart display, including felt, .straw, and silk coin-
binations, irregular , and close fitting models in the newest
shades. You are " cordially invited to see this display..
WEST MD OP SQUARE
CORNFIEL
"SHOP WHERE You ARE JNVIT1P TQ SHC? ''" ,`
C.
.ir
EDITORIAL (rOMMEN': ' an article in the London Five press the County and *owe urging the de-
Mkfei o,,a in reporting Tuesday's sessions of the velophnent of Maitland power may
Sarnia is planning Legislature. A. Ii: Acres (Cons., have an influence in 'bringing into'
for inun new*
ir that.
sloe'; is not Without } Carleton), . is repotted: to have made Prominence, the: disadvantage at
interest for «odeeleh. It is pointed 1 rsotne significant xennarks regarding which municipalities. far from Nia-
out that while Sarnia has an extent' I hydro, and urged that—the .Govern.` guru'lower labor in the way of power
sive waterfront, dockage i;s all pri-' anent art immediately .towards. the, costs, even should the development at;
Canaan
owned and the need of a muni- establishment of a flat rate for hydro the Black hole never be gone on with.
eipal dock Is felt. And when we looks to all rural consumers. This is the 1T�IE
rat then :Goderiah harbor becoming' second Conservative member this ses-
STORY OF
fened in with elevators one is forced anon to differ from the Government's. JOHN BROWN
to wonder just what possible future !Present hydro policy, the other being ,
industrial' developments might make' the newly»sleeted Foster Mofl'att,•vi' prof. Landon of lJnixersity of Wes..
'necessary at Goderiele. The City oft South Bruee. And The I t ee Press , tern Ontario Tells of the. Life off
.'forma has the Gtreet' allowance of learns that the fiovernmettt .doers trot;. ° This Anti -Slavery Martyr
London road extending out into the consider such speeches us being out z
harbor and this street allowance be. of lino with polio', or as being the ; The story of a man who was bang -
conies part of a slip 230 feet wide in speeches of insurgents within the ed for murder, treason land conspix-
tho Chamber of Commerce plane, party, but it it understood the Gov- ueyr, a nian deemed something off a
We understand that Goderieit has a ernment is somewhat itt sympathy l fanatic, and yet as man whose name
street alloaoneer extending to the was with the idea, and it would not bo (is sung in a sort of battle ei=y* of
ter'at edge, in the sontinuatlan of \Vele surprising if finale more definite Ind*- i freedom used in many countries, and
nation of the Government's attitude lingfittst airiest northward, and the a atnan at avhoaaa'hanngitt£ti Longfellow
proposal to make u :e` of a street al. towards as revised hydro poliey were and Emerson wrote that the day
Iowaance at Sarnia suggests a value forthcoming before) the StISien Can- would be a memorable one and Victor
for suet street allowances beyond the eludes. It may be that ft will be s Rego, the intellectual giant of Eur.
present me that may 'be made of found yet that Goderieh's advocacy of ` ope, said that his death wag the last
them. the flat rate or of some atpproneh to link in a chain that extended from
it Will be found yet to have been 'link
such was the story told by
A passible rsvision of hydro policy, merely*, advanced thinking. And tho Calvary, such was the story told by
by the ttovernntent is suggested by resolutions that %veru sent in from I vcrsity, at the Canadian Club meeting
last Thursday evening in an lecture on
"The Story of John Brown."
The speaker was introduced by
'lay. J.: N. H. Mille.
Jahn Brown, a direst descendant
front one of the Pilgrim fathers, 'vias
born in 1834 in Connecticut and wee:
phanged Dee. prei, 185;1. At the early
niro of nine he was en at visit to the
South and in the home he saw a negro
it boy of about 'hie own 'ago ilt.treated,
and this is believed to have been the
start of this matte"s life obeesslon, the
abolition of alavn<rv. Some histornaiws
B
Mr. Landon /said, did not consider that
John Itrown'h death hastened the civil
war at a11, while others eonauiered it
1bad hastened the ronilletbyten3ear�-�.
'The subbeet was not particularly a
Canadian ntte except that Jhit Prawn
an May ath, *tit and 10th, was in
Chatham with a group of as tor nr
90 of thrhitr and black inen platting
thee overthrew of the United States
t;overentent and at as later date he
arrived with * ramp cif fifteen ntr c.
vies at Wzatd•or, eh+lnt 1•' less~
brought. to Canada As their way of
', recipe fon) the slaver4• of the south.
The reiteeeee� of P. negro fa,', tet
titi„ continent *i,• f{
ls'*.rf,, ian4on, f..r the' n•rro. wworF�
the may rwrtl trhielt sone t r Chi• t on,
tiug'd .aRrie•t their *ill, Witt fest
Ng hentigbt to the ;i. utla.rn :a(M
And the neRmr« . a'n to ('nnaatit its
ton, of tItorsso4a ,lur-,a g the yt tRrr
„',rev* the nholiti.' it( i•tik++r\' 1t>r
iKir At,' °'ti!(+ nitMle'•a'�ta•'•ea'..i radta,e..�.'
Among ;aart, i a from "reap t e grove
PHONE 418
i
iteterang'ty Ylte viers of thc_e Twee
such and seal' :i mates place to be
raided and his buildings burned cit . •
welt and such a. day, ann:l se o -a. Then
seat's in Mey, 185e, t o find Dim in a
volunteer fire bail in aaathara, On-
tario, plotting with about twenty
ne roes and serepatbieers to over-
throw
verthrow the Putted Metes gosreraaraeet. a -,
Ther, was sa Juhaa iii the Camara, laazz-'u j
cve^r, and the wbole thlea 'x700 re -a:
ported to Wa.:rhitagton, where it wee 1
ieugbed et, ilowca er, Sohn Meow; a
and his 'fellow conspirators diepereed,
some going out of the country b; t
sway of Ingersoll, where ainero is come i
record of Brown levities, 'seen, end
y Niagara.
& Later on wo find I°rr etre Widnes, tap
la farm near lierper's.Ferrye, Va.. but
- ?.there 0 not touch farming done.
i °The f rm tome was made the centre
tQ w ici b es of IarIns were taken
and to white a toe -14)44y of inert gath•.
era in secreey. Then when they _
were ready they went down to hlarp-
Ic'a Ferry, seized what arms they
'needed in the aresenal, after having
cut telegraph wires, and took posses-
` cion of a volunteer tire. company's THE Rl 'XAi.x•.1 RUG 'STORE
hail where the prepared to conduct .
operations. Washington thought it BEDFORD BLOCK PHON . No. 1 Q GODGODERicu
time to put a stop to the thing.
Whet had always been feared was a
rising of the slaves and now they -
feared it was coming and sent troops ..
,S.PA , M.%RCll nth, lee.)
All the well-known Cough
anocl Cold Remedies,
Tonics, etc
always in stock at the Rexall
Drug Store
We carry a complete stock of all Patent
Medicines, Drug Sundries,
Tobaccos and Cigars
',t= ah mow, :-.
H. C. DUNLOP Phan. Be,
,
•
in charge of 'talism Ia. Leo, who of tist this time Mr. John G. hteDermid, tbe writer conceives t3 be what' the
terwaretn became famous as Gentian organist .and choirmaster of New St composer is describing musically in
Lee, and Stuart, who afterwards be- James • pre'byterian church, 14ndan, "Ghost in the Chimney?' The pro-
eame the great cavalry leader of the w,ho gave several numbers, "On tee
south. The little company in the fire Road to. Mandalay," "tuna," "Sim- dna
m ciceed with the singitag of the
tvhsllereikill%toreed qanunekly'
d Browh overcon%vias ?,woundedsonic, rise .and yowl, .. "t:,ome,. to the Pair"' Natio nal Anthem
and the first newspaper interview in. and Beneath aifiy Window' uch a
history was conducted by a represen-
tative the"d"elight of the audience, andmnear' Worms cause fretfulness and. reb
of the New York herald who the close of the program nicely ex- the infant of sleep, the great noun -
pressed his pleasure in being with a fisher. Mother Graves' Worm Rater -
published his 'story in the • form of
• question : and answer, with John'
Brown answering the questions the
reporter put to him.
'Ma attempt of Brown's was what
led to the charges being kaid ogainst
and at bis trial he was assigned
a lawyer to defend him. Ila `vn
convicted but before sentence was
passed, the judge' asked him if he had
anything to aan and his reply was
that he noticed that each witness
Godmicii audience again, and compli; Minato), will clear the stomach ,and
mented both 11fr. Campbell and his intestines and restore healthfullte&s. •
pupils on their good :work.. The me,
Ails contributing to the program •
•were Misses Marjorie Henderson and
Gertrude Wheeler and' Bill Suther-
land aril James Sutherland,;. their
numbers being as follows
"March in C" • Rummel
"Song of the Lark" (Op: 39, No. 22)
Tschaikowsky
"Minuet la G"`" Beethoven
kissed a book, which he found taught Bill Sutherland.
the opposite.of slavery and that, he
had been acting an accordance with "Sonatina in G°' Beethoven
"Tie unierea" • Schumann
0.L'"avalancl4e'' (0:n. ;ir,. N 2.) Heller
• Mariovie Hcnchr-on.
Conteit number, '•Ghn ' In the.
Gertrude tt"hence:
the principles of that Rook. Brown
was condemned to behanged and dew-
ing the month of November, 1859,
his great fear was that his sentence
might be commuted. He had got the
Old Testament idea, of an eye for au
eye, and that without the shedding of
Chimney" Kuliak
"Gavotte in 5 fiat" Handel
bloodthem could be no rehnission, ane' "Nocturne" Slater
had conceived the idea that, in his "?Airy Pipers" Brewer
death ire some way he would e;tpiate James Sutherland.
the Fin of his country in sanctioning The work of the pupils: shows that
slavery._Mr. Landon has made a they are getting an good undoratanrl—
terf thorough study of his .subjeet ing of the musical values of their
and has read. the original' Tetters piece, 'as they play, with good ea:pres.
whieh Brown wrote while in jail and• cion, and the proper emphasi 3 and
his. will. There was absolutely no phrasing which do so much to lift the
expression of emotion, and his wife performanee of a selection,out of the
who visited him in jail. expressed .no mealy mechanicalinto the artistic.
` the a ideaas 'husband iso .. Wheeler's
emotion. `,She seemed to he lmbuded In connection with... A2
i with h same her )i sb nd nurbei, Mr. Campbell announced a
and their desire was that he should: contest for the best essay on what
pay the penalty.
The day of John Browne hanging
troops guarded the jail in t hich lie
was incarcerated, guarded the route
to the place of execution. and were
stationed .around the field where the
execution took place' and the lecturer
, . mentioned the eeuliar -Circumstance 7_
-that it J. Jackson, the , "Stonewall
'Jackson" ofhistory; was present • en
that occasion in charge of a body of
cadets, and that the man who after-
wards was the assassin of Abraham
Lincoln, -also was present on the oc-
i
of friendly Quakers. ens oft. .
Tho negro spirituals, in which his
Browns was right And that
there is such a revival of interest at lus death spoke more eloquently than
the present time, Prof. Landon said, he could have done had he 'lived. At
gained their significance- from the any rate the Civil War came . on a
fact that 'Canada was the land of couple of years later and ,the rallying
to the negro. why, for fn- songof the northerntroops was the
stone, did they sing "Steal Away tit nod farm ar "John
Bown's Body,"s "
Jesus," not run away or walk away: song
Just because getting to their -earthly-sig` In .the Great 'flue it was one
better land meant "stealing -away," ,of
mo yt t1e most eal ffgttre oinnah r ones. walk"
and Canada was to them a veritable
Canaan. "Deep Water" referred to ed up and • down Cho ranks of tbe
the, waters of the Ohio River whish northern armies int the civil war were
bad to e crossed to get to Canada, 'Uncle Tom and John Brown. Those
their land of freedom. And so all who us boy had read Uncle Tomas
through these spirituals the language Cabin, rnwin the i
and
reflected the coinlitiona
ier which influenceotstY i d
the neg oes were placed teat betterJohn Brwn's. hanging provided a
moral motive which no doubt was
land to which "they ardently longed to
get, their earthly and spiritual as. powerful in.the combat between the
pirations becoming associated twill. North and then South.
>. filo doubt on Dec. 2nd next, the
eiJohn Brown lived for a time in 10th anniversary* of Joan Brown's
Ohio. Ila was a tanner and a"aitler hanging nearly every paper in the
of sheep and» scems to .have inane States tvill have an editorial on this
man who was hanged as' a murderer,
considerable money in sheep raising, At the close of Prof. Landon's ad -
hut rronttts never to have bung onto dress when the chairman, I:ev. Z. E'
his ego a±y long: At one #imo he toots Ford, incited confluent, thele was
a cargo of sheep ever to oEurope, solei pauso which was finally broken lay
theta at a good price and spent home ,
time fn travel, but did not than the Rev. P. C. Elliott, vette voiced the
cities As Moot of us would, but visited ; feeling of all . presant v1ien he saaid
the spots where historic battles handl that he simply wanted to it and
been fought under unequal odds, t thiol:, rather than talk, the address
where n hundred nien held back a ' had been t o 'tippiug int ifs rarnifiea.
time
thousand and to forth. Latex en WO
i ara attd Implications. - Ite had never
find John firown in New 45rork state.
A eoiony had been set out for negraee
when* they might take up a bit of
land and John Drown went nttd set•
fled among them to teach them farm.
, log. One winter night in 1837 there
canna a knock at hi, door and a poor
negro stumbled in, and his story of
the treatment lee brad suffered so
Investment
tante of she fundamentals of f ot;nd investment
is SECURITY OP PRINC1PAt..
This feature combined with an adequate *hid
attractive interest return constitutes a dear,
able investment.
The Pitst Mot wise 'fends cf ° leading
Catn*dilan corporations should be included in
a well diveasified investnieaat.
We :A32,1 x;:Si 1a sbir:t "e Aline +Cent.
DOMINZONSECMIFJP/Wit
t ase .4 Mtn, C R went 4,..(r... vocouveft
t:f.• 4 M . tQMQri•fp. 24 k .y, a. r
014,kootm,,e.h,, ti0bsr•it8, 0 rw
honed such a moving address. lie •
introduced a motaou of appreciation
tie the lecturer rind thin was 'seconded
by Mr. 7. 1', Mime and carried by
very hearty applause {
E1Ilt. at'AMPIIELI: S FEBRthtRk•
PUPIL It#'d:'ID.ttL
Mc Douglas Campbell, organist
wrought on John Brown that ho had and choirmaster of North street Fina
ell of his fancily who were precut heel Church, presented his February
and he had a family of nineteen, not ptapi' is recital en Wednesday ,wen>
all at whom were present on this a:. I inr5, Feb. trith, at his studio, Welling '
:aisles however, take•an oath to #fight ten street. IIe had as assisting ar.
this thinft slat"ciy~. F
IWhen Nebraska and Kansas week;
opened up to colonization, the Wash,
ingten Government decided that it
, would be left to the eeeple who would
go into these atatee theniselees to de,11
'rade whether they would be •ehieeryn
States er° a;then i e ttr.d two Streams
gel people mrsxme el in, one from the
New England !ltatte>, who were anti -;r
slavery, and Aar from the eolith who
Weil in favor et' slavery. Three were«
all 'Al`t3 t4 outmATA "'etttlinitt01 lt;
twe n thew two actio1ie. Jolla
limn CAMs i"s vita the Veer Elm-
` land
rse`land stream, and ap•peart'tl among
ere-elavety riveters ate at Rioretot in,
I•ntt;i$M.., til,r ettr *.tt:ltiei trot 'linen of
bridal a rapt; breauet M r.h`Li tiinr;,
emir depittlnte't e•f the Ii•,er••lrhit nt
wtr.!e pr1).114trev, hat jeit" ftro,'t%'w .'l.
1)1)1);)'",
KIDNEY
P1 !. L 5
•
A Safe Way to
End Indigestion.
Acid indigestion, stomach . sorr-
ness, gas, etc., are such common af-
ter-eatingailments now-a-daya , that
many. people take them US a matter
of course or seek relief with the .first
thing that's handy. They frequently
use nothing but ordinary bicarbonate
of soda, never realizing that though
this. often,' stops the pain, it may be
doing serious. harm to the stomach
lining leading even to dangerous
stoniach- ulcers. A safe, relintlo
treatment for acid stomach troubles
is the daily use.: -.after meals, of a Et -
tie Bisurated• Magnesia --either
Iets or powder. This instantly neu-
tralizes excess acid " in the stomach,
prevents its formation and so story
stomach trouble at its source. It
tends also to soothe, heal and protect
the ,ttonuich lining. llteals then dig-
est' `. easily, naturally and without
pain, sourness or gas attacks. Your
own druggist knows about Risurated
Magnesia and sells a lot of it. Ask
hien • about it today.. ., se
Banking Service
and Prosperity
PROSPERITY' on the farm'
is largely dependent on
factors beyond the realm of the farm-
ers' contr"ol. There must be a good -•
market demand for farm products and
the producetion costs must be kept in pro-
per relation with market returns. Our
Branch Manager is thoroughly familiar
with the business of fanning and is ready
to assist in carrying your farm program
to a successful conclusion.
17E CANADIAN BANK
,
OF COMMERCE
'THE STANDAwRDBANKOP
CANADA
mk,
and MEATS
SPECIALS IN
Fresh and Cooke() Meats,
Fish, Fruit and Vegetables.
A &Mine of Groceries, etc.
All new stock. - 4
Come in and see our goods and get
our prices.
Deliveries 9a, r»., ll uc.m.13 p.m. round S p•m,
tF'rt"rY_""'
'%lino 'Chi OUR WINDOWS
GEORCE W. BAECIILER
Phone 388
COR.11KING,STON STREET AND SQUARE
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