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The Goderich Star, 1930-06-05, Page 6ti • • PAGE SiX CoRgratetr to *amen s IMES if6100t4$ *lot vat w vrexl MIA vat invite, tO Usti ite. usexcalk WI) WM:WA ORAtiette.**Ith RED RO$E TE 110 • I, THE GODERICU STAR Iit t'0:2 Zaea.v feat a'asle ani fares GLiCet3 5AY:3e. ii-f;a7; ces,Ala ear-et:act r.ese and he tee letany etiia by Rev. „ Stara- seee„eles etas kle was ota pcoition to tat', *Iraalaana ci:A=P61 6f)ex saasierastkile see t20 205; ot- la9 nsan Finn, s-• t'fiatt:, ccr,:it:;. iltoweso4 Tist:3 at;ay To:.' 11, are:e hie oval heeste nea aaeepelled oat:aging en rereerea Leo se lee cesay Oases. ao the .`toraDan Lola s'Jla Gs Faiinea• tati:3Z bate. mac: to beturee gator of kft.45ataea' onatah. 4411:0-1- asel 13.rr conoitieii. She mint el. on "ItatrAt adVatann anRelation ta• ttaye Mot-ing out arena oae Pomo, (hav,11 eroblonas,-- orad liter. J. fem.; itutE,:, lamer eapeeieuesea,, bele J. Fenton. MA-, rector of Ttnjtti meat sai inianseaty einegie con- • Memorial church, /3:actor, on "ihe gamely neeeseug up no de acme and Pzezotrit Peon of tite Anglieca maitirg newer caneatione. Q flea to eaurch !n Canasta"move Gut of her p.aesent exp • After the bueirieee cowl= cam3 into larger end isgger thing3. I the tar vine' of tea in the pnrieli hall. hnow the temptation to rest main past There were,about 200 vieitors pros- aavanctmente, leaayson In his :eat in edditioil to people of St. Geer- poem eayse God nialle Himself in go's, and nil the clergy of the deanery many ways, lest one gocd creitom wow on hand, with the ow:option of shaeld • cerrupt tho world."- So God Rev. L. V. Pockock, of Myth, who hattere the nest in •erder that He absent en another important mission, an -end u out into bigger and ler- taking to himself a life-eartner to ger achievements. grace the Blyth reetory. The fol- :The second lessonif; that of risk lewitre ID the list of eergymen pros- and peril. If the nest has been shat - cid: Rev. It. S. ;once, D.A., ef (ler- tered; the eagles will sit upon the ries Rural Deane Rea. J. N. H. Mins, ledga ahivering and afreid. They re- B.A., Lalle, rector of St. George's, lase to move from the• ledge. The Godotich; Rev, la W. Schaffter, of mother eagle tries to toax them, but Wingham; RV. P. U. Gibbs, B. A., thor are so afraid they will not go. of Dungannon; Rev. L. C. Harrison, The mother bird does a very seeming- B.A., of Clinton; Rev. 3. P. Myers, ly cruel thing, she drops down beside B.A., of Seaiorth; Rev. J. J. Fenton, them and drops them down. The B.A., of Exeter,. Rev. P. G. Richard, mother bird knows that in that day L.The of Brussela; Rev. T. M. B. when the eagles learn to fly there is Parker, B.A., L.Th., of Hernial; Reva risk and peril of death. This is the P. ir. Paull, LJTh., of Hayfield, secre- only way God can help His children, tary-treasurer of the deanery; ,Ven. 'They must Ily: they must be an ad- ArehdeaconeJones Bateman and Rev. venturous people. The church people Canon Hill, of Goderich; Rev. A. O. have thus got to learn that God will Gallaher, of Listowell; the visiting pull us out, to flight, even though clergy from Toronto and London, who there is risk and peril in the adven- gave addresses in the afternoon, and ture. We sit upon the ledge of se - Rev. Canon Allan Shatford, M.A., entity always. So men must have 'D.0 L., 0.11.E., who gave the address larger experiences and larger visions, at the evening service. for Jesus said: "He that loses his For the evening service the church life shall find it, and he that findeth was well filled and .the chancel was his life shall lose it." Did not the filled with the choir augmented by apostles undertake manyrisks and members of other choirs of the Dean- perils in order that they might spread ery. • the gospel, and the martyrs sacrifice Rev. Canon Shatford preached a themselves for the church? is a stirring Boynton, He said in part; glorioue experience of the churchthat nave taken my text from the 32nd they went out into wider enaces'With hepter of Deuteronomy,'1142 verses. no fear or no anxiety for the future. "As an eagle stirreth up her nest, and because they did iti their chore's. Leadership Needed in the Chum iluttereth coley lier young, spreadeth ltas grown and adtanced, We build Should Not Rest In Secure Positions But Adventure Forth to - New Conquests CANON SHATFORD DRAWS LESSONS FROM THE EAGLE Must Not Be So Bound by Convention and Tradition That We Cannot Become Interested In Anything New The semi-annual convention of the Deanery of Huron was held in Godee rich successfully on Monday last, opening with a celebration of Holy Communion in the church at 10 a.m., for which the celebrant was Rev. R. S. Jones, B.A., of Gorrie, the rural dean of Huron, assisted by the rector, Rev. 3, N. IL Mills, and Rev. L. B. Harrison, of Clinton, and Rev, F. H. ,Paull, Bnyfield. At 11 •oklock the, Deanery Chapter met in MacKay Kau in the doWilatairs voom, and the Deanery Womena; Auxiliaryin the upstairs of the samebuilding, building. After prayers, for missions at noon, luncheon was served in the Parish hall. IThe afternoon meetings assembled at 2 o'clock, the Deanery Laymen's; abroad her wingsNaketh them. bear. our wellaend then sit behind them in eth them on her Wings, so the Lord security. The church is not to rest alone did lead him, and there was no noon fortifications but to go out into stringte God with him." • the open and see if she cannot win One of the noblest addresses in all new kingdoms' for Jesus Christ. literature will be discovered in the When we have spent so little of our 3243 chapters of Deuteronomy. tine in adventuring forth we only have selected from them this one confess this weakness. Christianity striking and suggestive figure of the is always mast glorious and most ad-, eagle and her freedom, .because it mirable when she is moving out of seems to me to contain some very her conquerable fields into unconquer- helpful suggestions for, such a gall. able territory. We ntust have adven- ermg as we have here tonight. llis ture. (Sometimes 1 think that we are a very strong and yet a very tender so bound by convention and by tradi- figure, and it -illustrates the inethods tion that we are never interested in of God's dealings with his children. anYthiwz now. There is a measure of cruelty in the We are not taking any risk, but are remaining 'in our figure, yet there is a broad tenderness positions of security. in it. and we are given to understand The third lesson welearn from this that love must combine both severity st-ileing figure is Tem the upbearing and tenderness •if it is to fulfil its wings of thee. mother eagle. The purposemother eagle Is watching very an- . Let me take the figure and analyze xiously, and when she sees that the It for you in order that we -may learn eaglets nATALslanger„she drops -like some- e thunderbolt and bears them to a $75 to $2200 15 Good Used Trucks Rcos, Ford, Chrevrolet, Graham Brothers* Dodge, Loyland. Stake and dump bodies. Every truck in this Est is priced away below its actual value: Come in and see for yourself. Transportation pad both ways to actual huYers• ' REO SALES CO., of Hamilton, Led. 28 PARK ST. SOUTH, HAMILTON, ONT. Regent 6904 Opals Eyenissea Be Certain of SAFETY Build with Gyproc tfIRE can hurt your .I.: home to destruction unless a fire-resistant ma- terial such as the new Ivory coloured Gyproc Wallboard is used in its construction. Inexpensive, perma.. ntnt, easy to apply, Gyp - roc Wallboard does ,sot bum. It is exactly what you want for fire -safe walls, ceilings and par- titions when you build, remodel or repair. Mk your dealer today for full information on Gyproc Wallboard or „ send for interesting free book, "Building and Re- modelling with Gyproc." GYPSUM, LIME AND ALABASTINE, CANADA, LIMITED Path • 010.M10 'Thew I ye RY • eepaegsa eata alt GYPROC I irep1 (to I Wci 11 I) d i'd 14R sale The Gedtri,ch Moildtcttstitig Co, Ltlytited Ontariq thing of the habits of tbe eagle be- i Place of Aafetz When she has let fore we can enter into this very them rest long enough, she catches Suggestivfigure. The eagle btu& ,thera on her wings and tips them nif its nest on the ledge of some high again, and thus sees by repeated trials t OK far above the haunts rs ' of meo, I that they can make a flight of their and there she esther young. When own. And that StgeMS to me to tell the time comes that the young are to us something about the past faith of have a flight for themselves, she the church made for you and me. orrps them down from the nest. When we make A new adventure, we When they look from their ledge in always have th,entourage-us the up - the distant heights, they crawl back bearing wings of God. 11'he place of into the security of the nests. Then the past is not in front of.us but un - she does it very Cruel thing; she de- derneath WI and behind us. There liberately tears the nest to nieces, rips have been great souls behind us and it asunder and casts the (eaa:ae fragments it is no business of ours to take an far away. There the young sit attitude of scorn against them. No upon the ledge shivering. Row well matter where we go, underneath us that illustrates the method of Cod's all the while are the upbearing pow - treatment of the ancient people of ers of Almighty. God. The good are rqrael. He deliberately broke up everlastingly tempted. We are afraid , their conditions and forced them out to undertake things for fear we make into new and wider undertakings. mistakes. There have been mistaked He carried them from their home Le in the past, but by niiitakeS we learn. Egyptian bondage. Let us believe that God will not let us The history of Israel is a constant go to destruction, and that when He illustration of this ancient figure of •sees that we are in danger He Will the shattered nests and not only does give us power and strength. He will. it apply to the people of Israel but to provide a way of escape. In the time the people of God everywhere. It of the Reformation, everyone thought applies with striking force to our own that it 'was the end of the church but Enip re. How often has the British God is always present when destrue- Empire had its nest shattered i We were sitting upon the secured ledge tion is near; as the bible says: "Hell shall not prevail against her.' ! Peo- of international diplomacy Itt nee. ple tell us that the end is come but and we were becoming very satisfied with War own conditions; and then underneath the time are the upbear- ing arms of God. So, my frienc14,..go God shattered the nest. He broke up brood of the eagle, let us make our_ our security and the nest has never flight with trust and confidence, going been' restored. off into larger things and responding • In strident times how very frequent- to the written challenge of the Master ly God hasshattered the nest of the to do all things worthy of Christ. Ecclesiastic home. He broke up the The first quality of the eagle is that church in the apostolic age, and sent it•can see farther than any otherbird. tliepnaterviretsheoruethiansbetoeovneray tcountry She can look into the very face of the wh othe people to be eat's- sun and -never blink her eyes. She n the part of fled, God has always compelled them can see things steadily. If there is btlWierkeelliteaenedrtwheasPe°a Ptil new and larger conditionando many People is Put! tered, end we are beginning- to- believe brought back to a realization of God. Plete. They only see things from one rn the 19th eentury trio nest was shot-, angle. neiewewreheunrgooldar outstat ono one thing more than another that the side of the question. We only look church requires today 0 Is a syllt- metrical 'vision, for the vision of so into We are only looking at one 'al and incom- _ out into bigger things. The nest was tide of the church, and we can entity was broken up as in the day of only see things from our own parti- the present generation.. There fir one cular angle. The word Catholic thin/ that Ire will not permit, He will means universal. A universal doc- never allow es to remain in a fixed trine, a universal practice, and a unie poeition. Whenever He finds us vernal domain vonstitute the fuller refusing to undertake larger' reapon- vision that makes us really worthy of sibilities, he deliberately tears our the name of /esus Christ. What we nest to pieces. Those of you who need is all vision and we need partt- ime read the life of Robert Louie eularly, spiritual vision, for we are so toars.1 useterial tillage that we ate at to Ileac EzgLIt of tae spiritual, and Lttsvplairegail 43 a ea; real than the The mond thing thaa V -as eagle Com. eagle is tee aersest and toames tts n ii,;;;c5f.,..y z,ce, ' freeot of obitdo. it can tip IL.) great, heignes and ie fauna en Cao feaeas of 'rivers In every continent. rle r..1 confined to any partscular Qui is he freest of&Jthe seatheacti tribe. Vie membere of tne Aural are so often not fro. Men was me& free but lie la in v4604 Dec& tiro •. mentally imprisoned toy vtejacleesi; they have got a earea zaant. lizey are seat free nitofiectually. Others are not free socially, tilt** vnly in terms of class or ut Ince. trusting man may be tie nave not bo limited by the Wilda et class ; he met be just as free sr, the eaRlo. i Whomever he can he must aive ser- vice to God. I 'the third quality of .tr..0 eagle is that of leadersnip. Le is the Ling of 1 alt birds, and that is why he has teen • Chosen as tne'sygebal et so many na- tionalists. 'What the church re.quirea today is leadership, and We ha, o not get too much of it. I thine: we have egOt to COU/OSS that in the church we are lacking leadership. We are cal- ling for men and women to lead us out, I believe that the people are ready to be led. 'the young people are looking for leadership out they do net seem to get it. Unless we eultivnte leadership in the chinch we are not worthy et the gospel. We want leadership in the auxiliary, Sun- day schools, and leader s among the -clergy, and are at present looking for this in the Lambeth conference, 110 outlook for the church is somewhat cloudy and obscure. There is mighty strength in his outstretched wings, however, His power is mighty. The fourth quality is that of endure ante. We are not a very patient people especially in the church. We want things over-night."Step lively" is the slogan today. , Only these who arritot weary in well doing, and Who faint not will endure. God endures. We want -endurance in the . church. Man fall out before the battle 'is over. Statistics are not very encour- aging. Few come to leadership. Out of -100 that start out only four per cent attain to leadership; they stick to their tasks and plod on. The church needs assurance, and the pee. ple .in the church need inexhaustible patience; seeking not for appreciation but seeking only the glory of. God. These are the suggestions given by this very striking figure. As the eagle flutters over her young taketh them upon her wings so the Lord alone did lead them. May God make us a worthy brood of the eagle. "As an eagle in the greatness of God flies, SO will I fly in the freedom of the' space twixt the earth and the shy." 'Nights of Atony eerim in the train of asthma. The victim cannot lie down, and sleep is driven from his brain, What grateful relief is the lirmn'esdi-aktsPthlgeta Remedy. Eel , btkanizhes- th frightful . clears the passages, and enables the'afilleted one to again, sleep as soundly and rest- fully as a child. bast on the gen- uine at your nearby.druggist. A CONSTITUTIONAL TSAIE • Premier King rode into o.ffice in 1926 on a "constitutional issue" of his own creation. In 1930 he will ride Out of office on the same kind of issue, also of his own creation. ' lit is the issue raised by his unfor- gettable declaration o p n.sy—inade APril 4, 1930—that he, as Prime Min4 ister, would not sanction the granting of "a five cent pie:e" to relieve un- employment in any, province in which a Conservative government held p o wne r i Ithat declaration Mr. King read Ave of,the prov,inces of Canada. out of their confederation , rights, which guarantee to ali Canadiahs equality before the crown in rights as well as in responsibilities. He laid down a principle of discrhninatihn and a pol- icy of partisanship which creates the most offensive and repugnant chal- lenge to constitutional government in anada- Not o'snly7y, nlee, but twice. in cold blood be challenged the manhood and the womanhood of Canada. Pirst it was "not -a single :cent." Then.. it was "not a five cent piece," to those who dared worship at any shrine but that of McKenzie King. There are hundreds of thousands of Canadtarie. who will go 'to the Pella this summer not knowing whether the violent conversion of Mr. King to new fiscal polities should be endorsed or denied. But there will not be a single Canadian who will not know that his policy of discrimination between 'the provinces—ebetween citizens—should be repudiated. The public resentment against that insidious and unlawful policy is a vast forenand a growing force. While he succeeded in applying it during the past winter, it is a doctrine that must be condemned. It. is , constitutional issue of Mt, King's making. He can, not complain when he goes down to defeat under it. 44 A cleaner home. with far le4.% work. by reflooring with hardwood atAmaatiiiiir ,filawfaigyasgagagalogegge.e.. When inviting estimfttek, insist that they based nit Semite's -Kent floeritts be 1 • PUBLIC SCHOOL soAan The regular inonthly meeting of the Public School Board was held on Monday evening last. Owing to the approach of the stvinuning season the Hoard passed a motion to ask the town council to consider the inetruc- tiOn of pupils in the matter of -first aid in case of drowning. was rus- tee Wallace who brought this matter up. He pointed out the frequency of accidents during the summer and the importance of young people being able to use the proper medal& to re- Stiaitate a Companion who might. be in danger of Crowning. Unless the young people themselves knees these methods precious time would be lost in a case of drewning in getting some - " THURSDAY, JUNE Rh, 1930 c?RNs CO -RN FLAKES oirc .4% 1. *Th. Rakes with the! "wonder." gavot • • - world's most popular ready.to-eat cereal is made of native Cana& • Jan corn. 12,000,001) people daily enjoy corn in its most delicious form -4n crispKe. logg's Corn, FlakesA one who knew how to proceed, and smuasnitatiadounmltslelethodsrein. ignorance Sharman gave the information .that such in- struction was included in the hygiene instruction in her grade but the class had not reached this yet. A power hewn mower for the school grounds was suggested in, a letter from a company which makes this Jine.'The board thought there might be some advantage in the town own• ing such an outfit for cutting the ' Square and other parks" and for the School grounds. The Hoard took no action, A letter was received from Miss Pally thanking the board for her in- crease and enclosing signed contract for the coining year. Mrs. Thorneloe wrote asking for a continuance on the staff, either in her present class . or some other, and an applieation was received- from Miss Edna Horney for a position on the staff.As Miss El - fiat has been on a year's leave of ab- sence• on account of the condition of her health, it was decided to have the secretary write; her as to her desire in connection with resuming her work in order that the board may know rhliate f positionternthere -will be to fill for The principal of Victoria school re- ported 337 mils on the roll, average attendance_ in mey-a308e-9-1--perecent;— Mother Graves' Worm Extermina- tor will drive worms from the system without injury to the child, because its action, while fully effectiVe, is Penny Bank deposits $108.77, number of deposits 367. ;Miss Sturdy ta ht five and,a half days for Miss Hartwell . and Miss Murphy three days for Miss Hume and half a dayfor Miss L. '114 inson, non resident fees, $3. The nrincipal of Central school reported 203 on the rolls, average attendance, 184. 90.6 per cent. Penny Bank bits 865.80. $65.80. nuinber of deposits 158. Mrs: Hedditt taught two days for • Miss Hem' • These reports were- aclonted. thei simply teachers to be paid, and a num- her of accounts were referred to the! finance committee. The matter of teachers' contra* were left over for an adjourned meeting to be held in a 1 fortnight. . Trustees in attendance were Messrs.*I G. L. Parsons in the chair, Jae. Car- rie, Jno. Cutt, Wits, -Wallace and Wal- ter Naftel.• "HERM ALL. Mar N ow -ivag..414:ottlr Arter,- FE•EL FN • frgrgarEatzag - Transportation Service Long Distance Short Distance Per Engagements Phone . SIL McMath, 601 r 34, Clinton central. g \ . 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