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The Goderich Star, 1930-07-10, Page 7THURSImY, Ji.'LY' tette lel* 1 Sunday 4fkrnoon f I sty I. [l1ti6L mutarON,, Goert h Giltt. tONMttNMMIMIPsisal sionan nIsAyliililgl titN111iw Arai wawa amanillt simusup THE CODEIZICUU STAR the mafesty of God. In that case the There wee no isith is worsen; fled he psi «rawly xhiat,i:ent would have been diet vete not yet' seventeen. et stayed, whereas the bursting hue at tits ietw Byron was IK strange * trans* him. being.. He .threw off tits _control of • -"AndBistro* said; I will, naw► turn his mother. They querrelled when - side, atel see t:ham great eight, why. ever they met, sad se, violently that the bush le not burnt,' lie 1)411444 ' Mrs, Wort once flung tie tireirons et through the gate of curiosity and iter son. Both felt remorse eat tir,.es, ' • A11 emcee, the Muster vcslkethfound himself face to We with (rod. but the youth certainly Inquired We read iia the latter part et the !Mute when the Lord caw thea he something like contempt ter his By the toiling servants' side ; Zed chapter that "the children Of rat turned aside to see. God called unto mother's character. She, on he: side. Gomfoitsiile words He talketh- - reel slgbed by reasott o£ t.bu bondage,' him out of the midst of the bush, and Fbad .beet a faun, hint difficult, hveu rlihile Ilia hands uphold slid guide. ,end they erica, and their cry came up 'said, 'Mews, Mosses: He was dive ,; at .A.berdeen, where they lived in p'av- Grier. nor pain, nor any sorrow, unto God. posed to sect and hear. His was the ; eity before he became heir to his tit Rends the heart, to Him unknown ; While this anguish was being end seetnir eye, Ilbe heiiring ear and the t i , he had .fits of unconquerable : Jibe to>4:sy and He to•morraw dared in Egypt, Moses was being ' understanding heart site he received ' gloom, Had he not a latae toot a •Greco cu1keient gives Ilia °WU. trained for his work ci liberator. .As eat blessing.See in what a tender hose 'fault was that? To the • , Thomas ATael+eller. an hamate oflee house of Pharaoh he manner Gods\V remitted himaeif to thea proud, shy Byron his deformity scene. PRAYER • had received the 'trainin;r, oil a court lonely shepherd. "I am the God of 4;d amonstrous ineastice. fit oink- ''' As Thou, cl Lard, didst send Moses 'pier and a scholar sind•to this vats ad- thy father. " He did not say,° I tem led, as everything rindiltd"`•in that to deliver Thy ch©son People and .ded that of the shepherd amid the the God of majesty, unapproachable mox'bidly sensitive. brain. At Har- Jestls, in the $uiktesa of tame. to be solonin stoney of nature. The effecto and of infinite power, but the God of row, in spite of hie friendships ,tto ehe Redeemer of the World so dost f discipline thou send tie to tell the gospel story. „ then tY,ua drawn ficin he cal un Help Us to wort: and give and. pray that 7'Ty I;;ingdonf may coma and Thy will be done.. en Jews' name 'wo pricy. Amen. a e seep ine were seen in the the home and of rho family. Hltvintr, was something of a solitary. 'l'he change f e rinser. is h to;. lame foot hada good ileal to do with He, 'Ong forced in humble. paths to a great undertaking. ' God said, to malting Byron n cynic: Was go, into feeling, soothed o£ my peopl nd1I am value affliction to helivedain tie ni de hie journey world and tuned.' - deliver* -them out cf the band of the the Beet, wrote the-' magnificent rt,rhile busily engaged tending his, Lon - flocks Moses had time fQr co iniunin' Egyptians;' Iia actio could by ao "awoke e chine back to Lsn- single stroke, have broken their don onand a woke one morning to end With nature. Every bit of nature chains, called a •lonely shepherdto himself famous." • The tart flavor cf will teach the reverent, student: some- work out, 'through a series of bewild- disillusion, the noble, if Violent, ehant thing of God. The lilies as well as eying and discourarging undertakings, of liberty hit the taste; of the day.: the stars are teaeheee hat in' the case God's purpose: "F will send thee un- Everybodywaiitod to seethe post of -.Moses at this p rtieular time it t -o Pmrr Pharaoh, that thou ayest brine who was disillusioned at twenty-four. was .a bush. The surrounding mount forth my people." God never 'works Tide eras the period of his Louden tains might have been lit and Buell a from the many to the one; he works amours. .Lady Caroline :Lomb fell zt spectaele would .have beer worthy of fro' ane to alio riTuny: victim. to the first wicked upward ' t ..- 'AM I, that I Should go unto 2'hareoh, aids. Lady Oxford followed. . Byron and that' 1 should tiring forth the correroiided about- it all with the Children of Israel out of Egypt 7" worldly-wise Lady Melbourne, M. ARF -SCIENCE SPQRT 1Yhe idea was,ttoo emelt for him. Be Ileums urea the lettere to show that IN II[# STRY~ (DU TIOtJ was unite equal to the humble defy his liera, however reprenhensible, was. _ AG R i Ct1 LT UL R E :- which he performed under Jethro bis human, and anything but a hypocrite, .. ia'therin-law, but to go tenth orf such on the eontrary lie was "terribly sin- an undertaking seemed tar �beyond'his .core" • with himself. powers. The more tit any person is : Why did Byron nturret' At. any for service,' commonly, the less (min- rate, he married the'wrbngg woman. ion he has of himself. trod answered Miss Annabelle. ltMilbenBe wits .ser - his objection by` promising los tires- ious, hig r -minded,. something : of a once: •'Certainly. ii wilt 'be' with She was precise; •she thee." He.assured him of success, Wrote him in numbered paragraphs a "When :•thou hast brought, forth the list of the ' qualities :she required in a • • "people out of ': gypt, ye shall serve husband,_ Byron, when he�was piqued nod upon this'niountain." 'the .prom- by her first refusal, of him, called - itp,-t'hat God would have the `-_people her the "Princess of Pal:alielo;•rams." Wye kIim in. that particuls:i�' place She read him fairly,• but did notitr.. ti >*sian'. ssurance,• if fully believed, the least know how to deal with•hnm, w r at', all ' intervening obstacles would . she. argued when she .shdiild have ; tbj be removed' y His power. laughed.: Just a year after the mar- rV(•tRLD -MISSION,�r riage they separated. •• Setting Men Free' in India l et there were people who. got on uI. with 13yran. . Sir Walter Scott, who By Rev. I.1. H. Smith, Sitamau used to meet him.in •Murray's book- eve hope to have a. tvuittui winter. shop, liked and respected him. 'Thom- God has done much here.:., Over one as Moore found him.an atfeetionato nuridred and sixty were baptized this companion: • S. S. LESSON FOR 3U14 20th. 1930 Leeson '1 opic-lltosee. ,lesson Passage--�•Exoeus ,3:142. Golden Text- t1ebrewe tithe nAtors st rheumatism, :Ms m Djadeduch- anise. �M da�� �ra,rits �rheu tiC stithsamt ashler, vanish Wm crit stoves^. aV 3f« ta7g, t,t`Drar ansa' �adrvirlattodN• SWARTS' fluta: and 'fern Livei'q. flask , Stnbtes, Elo Montreal Fitre.se ,U lust ofi'tbe•t.gnsre SLVE2AL FiR5T/LASS. AUTOS ihielie FAR'-SEgVI E •- Gm':Ypfi- ANYWILERE ,ANO. WREN VQti W hf T TO GE r tiEltt • 'l+ua.!.., !vli:et till 1 tato* n,tu sei, to t t floats Ptaasertee1'a oAlp !ty ftt►'ett ,,,1X ttart. of ti'e to a;st• fat ail hall,tK Nl Ink it,.fir it ti',;. i,;»slurs i•'rrim'pt• tasty co• ltd' ' a`efui „kkte 1Kl'#! l',; .,:• Our :L?very end titkl i 4VOF`W4ar`. Win .he fontad lit•-to•clt,tr .• Zn. t,very respect 'Your Patrrunage hoficited','�R »4'h:t,re. 0177. • 1'tnt•1retil Street � fir /,■�!s�s+�d.�r+.:. SE. ydra Electri c r�,r ,+.:,p '•i,; Sa_ ry And Moses said unto God, Who i glan+te front tinder the drooping eye - ,'dost:Pro 'resstye Annue/. • Ez siti n 0 O t�A • • -1. 4. Coins b'.q' Electricity . Wash lay Electricity Iron b E!ectrititp. 0,40IVi NIEN'Iir ;., CLEAN, ' QUICK Cheiiper than Cool or Wood An .electric Vacuum- Cleaner removes the dust; a broom • just moves the dust - We .guarantee • all N y d r e • Lamps. for �'i,5oo hours. Walk in and see. display at The ----Sore • year: These need now to Ise trained. : 'Lae sympathetic admiration of .tski;d •tvhy we accepted•such.raw ma- ehelley.is even more interesting, be terial into the fold, I pointed to seine cause he saw Byron in the last phase, e: ox the Bhils.we brought with us, anti 'when , he Was living in Italy with I' told our critic than these very men Countess Guiccioli. This was at a who hate' been' the life of 'the present time when Byron was :totally tonin, movement . were themselves lustas cod :that ` fate was against him. He. raw a iew'years ago as the converts had !teen obsessed.: by a. kind of fat - here aro' now. • . «. alism' ever since his childhood. He Nor aretthey.all so rate •The head had extraordinary superstitions. , In jailer in .Pertapgarh ::has, for long this last phase his fevered imagine peen. •askipg for bapUisin.• He is a' tion dramatized his life: as a tremen- Brahmin. 1 told him.. to bring . some dous conflict. 'with" destiny, early all one else -t0 Christ. He, at once told : his. majestically gloomy .poems, like me of :four- prisoners hom he had Manfred,' were spiritual autobio a - won and' asked me to go to the- prison phies. There. never. were such -' "key" to baptize them. ' . poems. • o hit• e had ) 1,Vlieii. I askedhow him h Tlie;truth• is that`the conflict was in taught them. of• Christ, :he said, "Seen vron's, mind, "Conflie '' s Ys 111; there it .a custom. here that if .Maurois,.. "between the . sh iniental any• poisoner can .catch hold of '.the • and thecynic, between pride lid ten - Rajah's feet, ;he' will be •freed. So derness, between one of the mno` t en whenever His'. Highness comes here oohs and�one of°'tthc MOS* ti idol the prisoners are put a distance away ings.". under a strong guard lest they should throw themselves at his feetand de- mand fr edam. "Now," said Sohan .. ;, 4- 111`441:11K iJE•Jal TOPmeans STOP The STOP signs on streets- and highways are there for. your a 'protection. They protect you and all other drivers only to the extent that you obey thein. There's a STOP sign at every 'it:lterseetiola of The 'Zing's Ilighrvay and at il'ltersectipus, of many other main hiighways .' and streets. Be sure you heed them, If you do not, and an accident i'esalts you are responsible. You cannot depend on other drivers. While you niuj have complied with the law by Coming to, a full stop, you should, still exercise care in entering the traffic stream. f, a main highway, The Keystone of Safety on The King's Highwoo and all other roads and streets The ON,, GEO..: S. HENRY, Chairman„ • Ile do sooner had 'a good 'feeling than he mocked, himsdle. he was ' fend of exercise it wad partly b.'- cause it helped him to escape teem the "demon- thought" -from .himself. H13 expedition to help in the Green rebellion" weer ' his ftnaI escape. •.. It simplified. the ^ intolerable. problem. He 'Believed sincerely that he "lyase etriking a blow , foe freedom. • At, Missolonghi, on the .:evidence of his associates, , he acted ' with common sense and without affectati4m.. He was thit-six .when he r y hen diedi' it had : been solemnly told his •doctors iv' few days 'before, that his •thirty-seventh year was to be his dangerous a ;,.: "Byron," by Andre . Mauroia, e published in Canada by the Ryerson Press, Toronto. 12/PS91'76-1930.. , fall, "r sell my prisoners', to throw themselves cit the feet of Chrjist, and -- He will free' them; and thdde four ALLhave • done so." Rather good, 1 CANADA thought, . C ne. day. this same official came �. with . •us to some of the villages A Piauiesque Celebrationwhich '... we were visiting'.. Pointing to Nathu, • the head men of one, village, and who : 1194 circ„rely become a Christian, he. for all Canadians - said "Sir this man was the 'brain' • for all the dacoit es (robberies) "Les Voyageurs", ,a brilliant new Grandstand . around: here. I halve had him in jail pageant reviewing Canada's development from -tool" - "How about -him now?"' I ask - its earliest days--cuddh evening by 1,500 per• C- hriit ed 4"'Hbee 'fheaspliedgiven.it afl.'up •for formers on the worlds largest stage: . ' . thirty military and concert bands, includingiFie -' From The Record and' AllCanadaPermanentForceBand(bypermiesion Missionary Review. Department of Militia and Defence), .an: especi- ally recruited organization of sevelatysitt skilled . instrumentali6ta taken from .Canada's' Regular ens cam. Military f >:emoirs 2,000:Vlace f?xhibitio Ctottu;n four Book Lovers Corner' coneerta A 23 and 28, Se 2 and 6l u,gp to • .'. (By Jane Holley) - 'f list Trotting and Pacing Races t 'championship laurels -a unique unforgettable • '1.11e Riddle ot. Byron Tremendous Agranchesal displ*yi.and tom= ,'A .Good:800k is t"a Beat Cotrliiaioe'`- ;pcdtfons in all branches with a $125,000 Prize ; ' Pdth profeaeionalMarathon 'Swim for world " '''- sport spectacle. "M. -Andre Maurtos has the good ,Seaplane, outbosrdmotorboat, rowing, canoeing, fortune to be the one writer ori Eng- , sculling and yacht races and ether thrllling fish . subjects .whose . new books ,art aquatic events dally; and countless exhibits welcomed with egyal 4ntei�eeetee:hetie__ and ateetiona , eeleete.thls meatorab1e-A71-- . s-'i'eS ozthe channel. •Under his t;uid, Canada Year occasion." ante French renders' etre eagerly en- • ° r• 12educed,Itates by rail, bus, steamboat and airplane.' "Mel HARRIS; • President. H. W. WATERS, ' r -General. Mat.nger Blithe iti Minard'a and warm water, rubbing the solution into the aching •parts with the finger tips; , Minard's is also 'oleo. did for sprains, braises and str fined ligaments as • gaged in the latest attempt to solve the riddle. of- Lord' Syron, It io an ,, entrancing theme treated" by. tt"'dleitr- eyed, rather skeptical, but syralpathe- tic•. Frenchman. Mr. Maurole takes the Byron of scandalous legend and mattes him human. More Lovable 1. • Perhaps not; but certainly more com- prehensible. How came Byron to behave as he did? Mr. laurels di$cusyes the question' with French outspokenness -there is nothing "unmentionable" CANADIAN IOiIIAL Ill for him -and in the end the is divided ,4 between "pity and adnniration. for TRAIN SERVICE to TOROIiTO . Bin character.' to , RAIL' 7 XCEP 1 SUNDAY • overwhelming lawyer's piArgument Leave Goderich 16.20 a.m. 2.15 p.m. _ against Byron. Ile was a sensualist • Clinton 6.44 a.m: 2.45 p.m. 'and a cynic who played the devil with • Seafotth 6.59 a.m. 3.03 P.M. - women. He quarateled interminable " Mitchell 7.21 a.m. 3.30 p.m. with his mother,• Arrive Stratford -7.45 am, 3.58 pan. M. Maurois'. .reply is a portrait Ititchener 8.40 a.m. 5.18 p.m, which "mar,ellously softensthe deso- " Guelph 9.07 a.m. 5.44 p.m. late figure which .passed for this real " Toroth 10.25 a.nt: 7.40 p.m. Byron.. In : fact, there wero several Returning -Leave Toronto 7.50 a.nt. Byrons,all living together in the name 12.55 p.ni, and 5.55 p.m. tormented: ` heart • and brain. el. Parlor Cafe Car Goderich to Toro.- Maurois' first clue teethe man is that to on morning train, and Toronto to .he eves • passionately eeutifeental. Goderifch' on. 5.55' p.m.. train. No • People thought he wan heartless --end change .of tears between Goderich And he pretended to think so bine:elf--but Toronto. he was sentimental :in hie- curliest 3. A. LAWRENCE. " youth, -and remained so to the end. Town Passenger and ' At the age of nine lie felt in love Alone. �. Ti4'let 5."" with his cousin, Mary Duff, a tete; --_ Aberdeefff girl. That preceeious eft Back was 5o Bad Could Hardiy , Straighten Up fair left melt a mark that fifteen years later he wrote i. his diary: ,. 'It 'would pain tate to :Dee her mors." The dinappointmeit tof Itis first • romantic. love affair after ho had ' grown up had en efeet whieh was' positively devar••/eke • Mary Aon •- Cluttvorth, a nee eetor of Newotead• • Aliso Marioa Lute Enfield, nth ., 'write sttf'Psr Abbey, was alar Iv engaged to be . three yearn I guttered Irma terrible baekaebea, and marled, and she s•^covered from the when I bent over ct tildhardly straighten up spin. flirtation ae easily as a e1414 Geta A friend advised me to use Boom's Macy* Pills ' over the mettles. But when •ljyro.'s and after taking three Ilexes I w✓no aeon well ',gait, dream. t'AW ceded it was an if wile Noon I will novo? he without a box of 'Doan?s' in -,am 11.4 dropped out of rile alta. Per. tho house.'t Ei. t•a 1.0 exaggerated, but eeetainly ti i'lfclt 50 tents tt tkom at all detutilleta ort detaleru," ors. 'Saallti dhne on receipt : , great euange cared ager hili at ttilt, et Yorke by Trio Ta Milburn Co., Ltd., Toronto. Oat nrnt Byron t o , cynic eta i born. • ADVERTISE IN TOE STAIR y .411,44111 ' 4 a4' 4 �la:i Nal ,.,,. ''i. ,.s":.'"y""°""'''ei;=ir,e=„`i411".4`M=11° tin: ' • ,. 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