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The Exeter Times-Advocate, 1930-03-13, Page 6THE EXETER TIMES-ADVOCATE avow I-HTIHIHII III iiiiiiii I; IIIIIII HI I Ill .! III I I Rich in body and dedicate "as blossoms in its WHVBSPAY, MAIU’H 13, 1030 ‘Freak nfam the gardens’ m the green on Saturday last, bad for the month of February. unpleasant accident yesterday. He was pn top of a load of hay when it capsized and he fell*head foremost and landed on his shoulders. The following license commission­ ers have been appointed for the con­ stituency of South Huron: P. Doug­ las, W. Delbridge and Joseph Cann- 50 YEARS AGO The Local Legislature having ■Jbeen purrogued Mr. Bishop has re­ turned home after his .duties in Toronto, Greenway’s first party toba leaves Centralia on Among those -who are going from JExeter are W. H. Trott and James 33ew. On Monday morning a young man sibout seventeen years of age, son of JftTr. Henry Hodgins, living about two miles west of Crediton, met with an accident which resulted in breaking both his legs near the ankles. He was in the woods chopp­ ing in company with a .son of Mr. Richard Sims, and had chopped through a tree which in falling ^struck young Hodgins on the back while he was trying to make his ■escape ^ground of his Rollins Mr. •Townline, shot on Saturday last, a large white owl on the farm of Pe­ ter Gowan, measuring four feet, se- wen inches from tip to tip. Summer games have already been .ah'ere, a game of croquet was played laborious for Mani- Tuesday. and knocking him ' to the and rolled on his legs. Some ribs were also broken. Dr. attended him. George Leadstone, of the «!■ 25 YEARS AGO A number from here spent a very pleasant evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. on Tuesday. Mr. Archie time ago was freeze one of fering from an attack of gangerine. Mrs.’Billings and Miss Millie Oke, sang a duet in the Trivitt Memorial church on Sunday evening. IMrs. Mary Sanders, of the 5tli Concession of Stephen, having rent­ ed her farm, will dispose of her farm stock and. implements on the 20tli inst. and will move to town in the near future. Mr. David Gillies went to London Tuesday morning to undergo an op­ eration - at the hospital. The general store business at .Hensall of -Mr. R. E. Pickard, of town, was last week sold to Mr. W. Bawden, of the firm of Bawden & McDonell, who will place it in the charge of his son Mr. Sandy Baw­ den and step-son Mr. William Cook. Mr. Wm. Ford, of the 4tli conces­ sion of USborne, met with a very M.Simpson, Mooresville, Hodgert, who some so unfortunate as to his feet, is now suf- 15 YEARS AGO Mr. Richard Welsh to-day ships a car load of horses from Watford to Montreal. Mr. Caleb Heywood sprained his ankle while working in the McDow­ ell block last week. The ley sidewalks following the sleet on Friday afternoon caused Mrs. Frank Case and little daugh­ ter Kathleen to fall heavily on the sidewalk in front of Mrs. E. Sanders that evening resulting in the little girl breaking her collar bone. Mr. C. F. Verity, of Brantford, presented "Ben Hur’’ in James St.' Methodist Church Friday evening. The presentation was very interest­ ing as was also the singing Nina Carling and the music R. Phillips. The local curlers are now a series of games', each rink every other rink, skipped by W. W. Taman, G. E. Anderson, Jas. Taylor, W. J. Heaman, H, J. White and R. G. Seldon. • Mr. Wm. Smith, of Crediton, had the misfortune of having his collar bone broken while skating a days ago. Mr, Wes. Wein, who has been up for some time with a broken col­ lar bone the result of a fall, is able to use his arm again. of Miss by Mr. playing against l'ew laid St. James Guild, o£ Parkhill, the home of (Mrs. Norman F. The met at Newton and presented Mrs. William Clark, who is leaving ’for London, with a silver cream 'and sugar set on a tray. C. S. WALTERS, Commissioner of Income Tax 9 THE DEPART John OF NATIONAL REVENUE Income Tax Division OTTAWA DOMINION OF CANADA Income Tax Iniormation Reports Due March 3i'st EMPLOYERS—TRUSTEES—JOINT ST&K COMPANIES Are you an Employer? Are you paying a wage or sq|ary to anyone ? If so the law requires you to/make a return on Form T4 of all suchf persons to whom you paid $1,000 during 1929. Act .Promptly a The necessary Forms c|jn be HON. W. D. EULER, Minister of National Revenue. r more d Are yo Trustee, an Executor, or an Assign^ ? If so the law required from eport on Form T3. etaries of Joint Stock Companies e required to file on Form T5 a re- rn of dividends paid. 4 ‘ r' *•Avoid Penalties on application to your Postmaster C. P. R. ENTERS BROADCAST FIELD A series of radio broadcasts has been inaugurated ^jfxby the Canadian Pacific Railway every Friday Might from 10 to 11 -over CKAC in Montreal and <3KGW in Toronto With possibility of extension - to .Jothei* major Canadian cities in the near future. Tho ;J>asis of the programme has been organized under |4he baton Of Rex Battle* whose work as the director «Mf concert orchestras in X6nt:feal latterly at the jjRoyal York, Toronto* has won him great popularity. sniall opera Company has been organized for the |^production of light ballad operas such as have fea- Jtiited tho Canadian Pacific Music Festivals at Tor- onto, Winnipeg, Regina, Vancouver and Victoria, and these Will be given under the direction of Alfred Heather, well-known character actor and impresario. Ballad operas in French produced at the Quebec Fes­ tival, together With French-Canadian. folk songs, will be produced under the direction of Charles Marchand, popular folksinger. The larger illustration shows a sea-chantey scene from the ballad, “Bound for the Rio Grande, with inset of John GosS, who will star in the radio production. The other insets are of Rex Battle, leader of the orchestra, and Alfred Heather, character actor and producer of the ballad operas to be broadcast. Jhe ^Sunday School Wesson TRUMBULL, Litt, I). not good (Matthew 16:6-12; Mark *8:15; Exodus 12:8, 15). The par­ able constitutes a warning that the true doctrine, given for the nour­ ishment of the children of the King­ dom, would be mingled with corrupt and corrupting false that officially, by Church itself (I, Tim. 2:17, IS; 4, 3, 4; II By CHARLES G. PARABLES OF THE KINGDOM Sunday, 24-32, March 16.-—Matthew 13 Golden Text Kingdom of God is not drink; but righteousness in the Holy Backaches and Headaches For tlie bieat and and peace, and joy Ghost. (Rom. 14:17.) There are seven parables of the mysteries of the Kingdom of Heaven told by our Lord in the thirteenth chapter of Matthew. The first of these seven parables made last week’s lesson, the parable of the sower. We take the remaining six this week. The six parables of this lesson are: the wheat and the tares (vs. 24-30, 3 6-43); the grain of mustard seed (vs. 31, 3'2); the leaven in the meal (v. 33); the treasure hid in the field (v. 44); the pearl of great price (vs. 45, 46); the net of fishes (vs. 47-50.) The Wheat anil the T^res; A man’s enemy, after he had sowed good seed in his field, came while the man slept and sowed tares among the wheat. 'When the crop of both was coming above the ground, the ser­ vants asked if they should gather out the tares. The man forbade this lest they root up the wheat with the tares, At harvest time, he isaid, the reapers would gather the tares and bind them in bundles for burn­ ing, while the wheat would be ga­ thered into the barn. The Lord interpreted this parable when He was alone with His dis­ ciples. Christ Himself, was the sower of the good seed, "the child­ ren of the Kingdom”; Satan sowed the tares, his children. The harvest time is the end of when, the harvest tares, or children of shall be cast "into a while the righteous shall forth as the sun in the Kingdom of their Father.” How can men doubt, the meaning of this, when it was Christ’s own solemn teaching? I The Mustard Seed and the Leaven People often mistakenly think these two parables teach the gradual in­ crease of righteousness in the world, until the whole world becomes righteous. But this would be con­ trary to the parable the Lord had just taught, of the wheat and the tares, and to many other teachings of Scripture concerning the progress and increase of evil in the world until the. end. It is evident, from all these parables, that the King­ dom is the "sphere of profession” of faith in this world ; but some pro­ fession is false while some is true. The visible Christian Church is to grow large and larger, till the birds of the air can lodge in tis branches. Much that is in the professing Christian Church today is bad, not good, and all sorts of false teach­ ing and evil cults are lodging in its branches. The symbolical meaning of leav­ en throughout the scriptures' is evil, the world, and is reaped, the the wicked one, furnace of fire,’ "shine doctrine, and the apostate 4:1-3; II Tim. Peter 2:1-3.) The Hid Treasure and the Pearl; People often speak of these two par­ ables as though the hid treasure and the pearl both indicated Christ, or salvation. A little study of the de­ tails shows that they could not mean this. The interpretation is 'well brought out in the Scofield Refer­ ence Bible, In the one case a man finds a treasure hid in a field, hides it, with joy goes and sells all thai he has, and buys the field. In the other case a merchant seeking good­ ly pearls, when he finds one pearl of great price, goes and sells all that he has and buys it. "The interpretation of the parable of the treasure, which makes the buyer of the field to be a sinner who is seeking Christ, has no warrant in the parable itself. The field is defined (v. 3S) to be the world. The seeking sinner does not buy, but forsakes, the world to win Christ. Furthermore, the sinner has nothing to sell, nor is Christ for sale, nor is He hidden in a field, nor, having found Christ, does the sinner hide Him again (cf, Mark 7:24; Acts 4: 20.) At every point the interpre­ tation breaks down. "Our Lord is the buyei- at the aw­ ful cost of His blood (I Peter 1.18) and Israel, especially Ephriam (.Ter, 31:'5-12, 2-20), the lost tribes hid­ den in "the field,’’ the world (v. 38) is the treasure (Exod. 19:5; Psalms 135:4). “As Israel is the hid treasure, sc the Church is the pearl of great cost. Of the true Church a pearl is a per­ fect symbol: (1) A pearl is one, a perfect symbol of unity (I Cor. 10: 17; 12:12, 13; Eph. 4:4-6). (2) A pearl is .formed by accretion, and that not mechanically, but vitally, through a living one, as Christ adds to the Church (Acts 2:41, 47; 5:14; 11:24; Eph. 2:21; Col. 2:19). (3) Christ, having given Himself for the pearl, is now preparing it -for pres­ entation to Himself (Eph. 5:25-27). The Kingdom is not the Church, but the true children of the Kingdom during the fulfilment of these mys­ teries, baptized by one Spirit into one body (I. Cor. 12:12, 13), com­ pose the true Church, the pearl.” The Net of Fish: Finally, our Lord says that the Kingdom of Hea­ ven is like a dragnet cast into the sea, gathering every. kind of fish. After it is filled the fishe.rmen draw it to shore, gather the good fish in­ to vessels, and cast the bad fish away. "So shall it be at the end of the world.” Again comes the ter­ rible warning that the wicked shall .be "cast , . . into the furnace of fire; there shall be wailing .and gnashing of teeth.” Mrs, Murray Tebbutt, Chatsworth^. Ont., writes:—“For years I had beaai subject to backaches and headache^ and could find no remedy that rea'Il* seemed to relievo me until a neighbor told me about Doan’s Kidney Pills. ‘1X hesitated, for a while, about talw ing them, but finally I got a box anw found tp my great, satisfaction that both, the backaches and headaches weiw slowly but surely leaving me, so I go|| two more boxes and before I finished the second one I ires feelingr very different., ((My work became a pleasure ag'afc% and to-day I am in perfect health,” Price, 50 cents a box at all druggists and dealers, or mailed direct on receipt of price by Tho T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. Here? an (472) Travelling 180 miles in 55 hours, of actual ski-ing from Jasper Park! tp Lake Louise, five skiers who; will compete at.. Banff Carnival' have just completed the longest and most hazardous trip of • the continent. In all, the time taken was over a week and during the' trip’ they sometimes slept in the open in 40 below zero weather and other times in wardens and old trappers huts. All came through1, in the^pink of condition. Richard Jack, famops English., painter; and Clive Carey, bari­ tone interpreter of English folk', songs, recently left Saint John om board the S-S. Montrose. Mr. Jack: has spent the summer and autumn1, in the Canadian Rockies and is*, taking to England a large number; of canvases depicting mountain, scenery. Mr. Carey appeared at; the English Musical Festival at Toronto last November and toured the entire Dominion the folk dancers, terminating ■a concert at Saint John. has)- with) with! J. Gielden and Captain; two British officers, aroj 6,000-mile trip, coming1 Captain G. Stedell, making a and going, from London to Que-r bee, via Saint John, to take in the- Frontenac Winter sports at the- Ancient Capital; They will wit­ ness the running of the Interna-, tional Dog Sled Derby and partly cipate in ski-ing, skating and to* bogganing. In an address upon "Canada’s^ Natural Resources and their De-, velopment,” in Montreal the other, day, G. M. Hutt, development en­ gineer, Canadian Pacific pointed out that the value of agri-, culturzn products have in-creased fourfold in the last twenty years,., while that of mines and forests­ have been trebled, fisheries dou­ bled and increased developed water power* six times oyer. the popularity of Old. REPORT OF WINCHELSEA SENIOR ROOM Following is the report for the Senior room of the Winchelsea school for the months of January and Feb­ ruary. Pupils were examined in all subjects.” iSr. V—-Margaret Johns 86, Lome MacN,aughton 76. Jr. V—'Elsie Heywood 80, Vinetta Routly 7 9, Maizie O’Reilly 77, Olive Jolins 75, Greta Fletcher 74, Russell Mills 74, Lome Elford 73. Sr. IV-—Ralph Cornish 82, Clar­ ence Prance 80, Lloyd Bell 76, Phil­ ip Hern 71. Jr. IV—Gertrude Camm 81, Laura Ford 80, Ella Routly 78, Ruby Johns -71, Gordon Brooks 69, Ronald El­ ford 65. Sr. Ill—Gladys Johns 77, Kenneth Hern 71, Lillian Murch 68*, Alma Gower 63, Ethel Coward '52*. . (*) Those who missed one or more subjects. L. McCulloch, te.acher ROOM II Following; is the report of the Ju­ nior room of Winchelsea School for the months qf January and Febru­ ary. Those whose names are mark­ ed with an asterisk were absent for one oi’ more of' 'the examinations. Jr. Ill—Earl Qoultis 81, Dorothy Johns 80, Marion Miners 73, Thelma O’Reilly 64, Eula Herdman.60, Wei­ mer Elford 59, Irwin O'Reilly 5 8, Gordon Prance 55. Sr. II—Marion Pooley 81, Hazel Johns 79, Elgin Skinner 75, Harold Clarke 71, Clifton Brock 65, Garnet Coward 53*. Jr. II—Audrey Fletcher 71, Don­ ald Murray 69*. Johnny,,.Johns 68*, Harold Davis 61*, Ina Ford 60, J. .CoWard 52, Wilburt Coward 50, B. Brock 23*. 1st—-Clarence Ford, Gladys Skin­ ner, Clayton Herdman, Ivan Brock, Philip Johns* Tommy Raveney, Lois Prance, Alvin Murray, Teddy Johns* Pt.—Ethel Pooley, Margaret Min­ ers, Billy Brock, John Miners, M'ar- jory Fletcher. V. Russell, teacher with the O’Brien produce for some time has severed his connections with that firm and has purchased the Zurich Dairy business from C. Schrag & Sons, taking possession at the middle of March. Mr. ‘Wellington Johnston, proprie­ tor of the Dominion House, met with a very painful accident the other 'day at St. Joseph, when a heavy steel roller used in a. fish boat fell on his foot painfully bruis­ ing. Mr. Frank Bossenberry, of Kit­ chener, is spending a week at the home of net. Mr. A. property Mr. Herb Krueger, of Hay, who will take possession on April 1st. Mr. Garnet Walper, who has spent a few weeks at his home left for Chatham recently. Mr. N. Seimon, Massey-Harris agent Zurich and occupies Though Dobbin continues to hold a prom­ inent place on the. farms of Can­ ada, the “Iron Horse” or mechani­ cal farm fcnplement is advancing in favor, particularly in the Prai­ rie Provinces. Estimates give a. total of 66,220 tractors in opera­ tion on the 248,162 Prairie farms, 14,557 of which were bought last, year. ' Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Wag- G. Edighofifer has sold his and his barber business to the new local has moved to Mr. P. Kropf’s house on Edward Street. A surprise party was held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Bassou when about forty guests- gathered and spent a most enjoyable evening. Mr. and Mrs. O. Klopp, Hay, en­ tertained about fifty of their friends to a social evening on Monday last. DISTRICT NEWS A grand reception was held in Watson’s- Hall, Kippen, in honor o.f Mr. and Mr.4. W? L. Meilis, of Kip­ pen, who recently returned from their honeymoon trip. During the evening Mr. and Mrs. Meilis were presented with a beautiful Chester­ field suite and a sum of token of the love and which they are held by friends. Zurich Mr, and Mrs, Roy Merner, of Hay, accompanied by Mr, and Mrs, Sam. Merner, of Hensall, motored to Ham* ilton and Burlington during the past week. Mr, Norman Gascho, who has been The death occurred in Henry Cudmore. Since Cudmore has run a small chicken farm and a large apiary at I-Iarpur- hey. He is survived by his wife. Mr, A. M. Crawford, of Wingham,, In the United States open singles de­ feated W. A» Notman in the final bowling tournament held at <St. Pe­ tersburg. Gross tonnage of vessels enter-- ing Honolulu harbor has increased from 2,885,2-18 tons annually to>- 7,174,286 in the last ten years, ac­ cording to official figures released, late in December. The Canadian Pacific inaugurated direct Vancou­ ver to Honolulu service December 13 with the palatial express liner- Empress of Canada. Other com­ pany vessels on this rim will be-* the Empress of Russia, Empress of Asia and Empress of Japan, tho- latter recently launched.---——— In the province of Quebec there- is now a total length of 12,502" miles of paved, macadamized and gravelled roads which is 38 per­ cent. of all rural roads in the pro­ vince. In 1929 the Provincial De­ partment of Roads maintained 10,- 195 miles of improved roads, con­ structed 1,584 miles of new road, 188 bridges and culverts and elim­ inated 16 grade crossings anf^QOS sharp corners and curves. •» Faint, Dizzy Spells For Four Years® Got Worse Every Year Mrg. J. Bennetto, North Sydney,, N.S., writes:—“I used to have fainfc- and dizzy spells, for four yours, and/ was getting worse every year. “One day my husband asked me I had ever used money as a esteem in their many Seaforth of 1911 Mr. I said I had notF so ho got Did a- box, and after I had taken half of’' ' it I found I wan* getting bettor, X then got two-- more and after* finishing them I was greatly im- t used the Pills for that was five yenx®' proved in health, two months, and __ __ ago, and I have never had a faint or dizzy spell since.” x /j Price, 50 cents a box at all druggist®, and dealers, or mailed direct on receipt of price by The T, Milburn Co., Ltd-. Toronto, Ont.