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The Exeter Times-Advocate, 1936-06-18, Page 6THURSDAY, JUNE 18th, 1936 THE EXETER TIMES-ADVOCATE CT«kf«S IH CRBAM • guaranteed. J Bresh, npe strawberries and Kellogg’s Rice Krispiea make a real treat for any meal in the day. Nourish- g. Easy to serve. Rice Krispies are always At grocers everywher Mother Goose age. Made by London, Onta CRISP KRISPIES they actually crackle in milk or cream Huron County Council Friday account to end of 1935. w arden’s Committee This committee reported in favor of having all motions or resolutions to an outside body be first referred to the proper committee. That enquiries requiring answers in ninutes should be in writing. any the J Important Report Regarding the Clerk’s Report, Warden’s Committee reported “that it was worthy of every consideration as it contained many features that would improve 'County Council pro­ cedure and greatly assist in the con­ duct of the business.’’ the Finance The payment of several 'small ac­ counts was recommended while ‘no action’ was advised regarding those of the Goderich Hospital and two doctors re Harold Kaitting about which Mr. L. E. Dancey had written the Council, er’s report as as therein set refund of §30 belt Weir was ordered to be paid to the Township of Turnberry. The County Treasur- adopted and the rate out was adopted. A towards burial of Ro- Education Grants for .Schools Goderich Collegiate .... Wingham Collegiate ... Clinton Collegiate ...... Seaforth Collegiate Exeter High School .... Mr. Harry Edwards and Miss Ed­ wards acknowledged the Council’s message of sympathy in their great loss. McNall-Davidson—That the girls at the Registry Office be paid 25 cents each per hour for the time they were employed in the transfer of the new equipment. The Council will petition the On­ tario House to enact legislation to empower County Councils and Coun­ cils of High and Continuation School districts to submit requests for grants of those bodies and Board of Education for grants to Municipal Board for adjustment when neces­ sary. Replying to Reeve Turner, Reeve Haacke stated that Huron County maintains the Boundary between Bruce and Huron Counties from Bel­ more west to No. 4 Highway. County Road Commission This Commission reported that the roads had been maintained as usual since January but as the funds were expected to be the same as last year no permanent improvements were anticipated. This year the Coun­ ty is faced with an extra sales tax, gas tax and lack of relief grants while extra cost was incurred by the severe winter and 66 miles of new road have been added. Maintenance work will also be restricted. Damage Claims Settled The motorcycle of the Traffic Of­ ficer was replaced by a new one. Two damage claims were settled, one of Mr. George Lane for §250 and one of Mr. Walter Woods for §85. One damage claims was successfully re­ sisted in the Courts. Roquets for additions and changes on the County Road System were left over until next year owing to short­ age of funds. The request of the Bluevale delegation will be consid­ ered and such changes as are neces­ sary will be made. An application will be made to have the Dashwood Road assumed as a Provincial High­ way and that the County be remind­ ed of the -wish of the County to have he Amberley-Listowel Road and the Wingham and Harriston Road also assumed. Town of Seaforth The Commission recommended that of the §6471.88 grant received "by the County from the Province on account of paving Main St. in Sea­ forth in 1927, that Seaforth be cre­ dited with §4016.91 to balance the Estimates of Commission or §1,564.67 less than in §40,448.35 193 5*. Maintenance: Weeds ..........................§ 3,000.00 Grading ....................... 1,500.00 Dragging ...................... 10,000.00 Culverts ........................... 1,000.00 Bridges ,........................ 2,500.00 Tarring ....................... 2,500.00 Snow ............................ 10,000.00 Guard Fences ............. 500.00 Calcium Chloride ......... 10,000.00 -Salt .............................. 1,200.00 County Bridges ........... 400.0 0 Resurfacing ................. 1'5,000.00 Drains ......................... 3,000.00 §60,600.00 Construction: Rebates ........................§ 4,200.00 Bridges ........................ 4,00 0.00 Grading ........................ 1,500.00 Drains .......................... 2,000.00 - .... §11,700.00 Superintendance .....t.... 4,500.00 Machinery .................... 12,000.00 Traffic Patrol ............ 2,100.00 Insurance .......(.... 50 0.00 Bights ........ 70.00 Legal Fees, Claims ..... 5 00.00 Interest Charges ...... 3,500.00 . Cjnmittee Pay Lists .... 500.00 Deficit December .31, 1935 3',000.00 §102,970.00 Receipts: Levy 1.2 mills .............§53,125.41 Subsidy ............ 46,900.00 Gas Tax Refund ......... 600.00 Sundry Receipts .......... 1,000.00 Traffic Fines ............... 1,000.00 §102,625.41 That the insurance policy offered by Lloyds through Nelson Hill, cov­ ering liability up to §20,000’ for a premium of §3 6 8.00 be accepted. Continuation Schools Hensall .........................§ 2,381.90 Wroxeter ...............n.... 1,19 6.15 Blyth ............................. 1,195.70 Brussels ....................... 2,044.97 Fordwich ..................... ,1,882.40 Zurich ...................... 453.60 § 9,154.72 Other school grants wer.e: Forest High School ,....§ 31.62 Harriston High School 173,5S Listo'wel ....................... 857.54 Mount Forest ......... ' 20.30 Lucknow ....................... 1,557.60 Parkhill ..................... 331.68 iSt. Marys Collegiate .... 202.82 London Technical 3 62.9 8 § 3,538.12 Warden Bowman thanked the members for their undivided atten­ tion to business and their co-opera­ tion before adjourning until Decem­ ber 1st. Sunday School Lesson A QUIET, WELL CONDUCTED, CONVENIENT, MODERN 100 ROOM HOTEL—85 WITH BATH WRITE IFOR FOLDER TAKE A DE LUXE TAXI FROM DEPOT OR WHARF-25o Legislation The Legislative Committee report­ ed that they did not consider they had authority to change the Govern­ ment Regulations regarding the hos­ pitalization of Ontario Hospital men­ tal cases. They approved of a resolu­ tion from Wellington County re rail­ way crossings; but disapproved of the licensing of grain choppers. They advised no change re bond­ ing of officials by private bondsmen and no action as to county paying burial expenses up to $30 for indig- ents, whether hospital cases or otherwise and the same answer was given about patients at Woodstock. Executive §50 was recommended as a grant to the Sick Children’s Hospital and §1'5 to the Lucknow Library. The question of returning Thurlow Mc­ Donald to the County Home was re­ ferred to Blyth Council. §5 0 was do­ nated to the Huron Rural Trustees’ Association. County Property The Warden of the Gaol was em­ powered to look over the furnace and put the heating tank on a lower level. This Committee had inspected tfie tomb and site of the late Dr. Dunlop and recommended that something should be done to preserve it, That the Colborne Council and the Minister of Highways be asked to co-operate and that Mr. Harry Mc- Creaih be thanked for his interest in this matter. The redecoration, of the main in the County building was held over awaiting an improvement of the finances . God also hath highly exalted Him and 'given Him the name which is above every name; that at the name of Jesus every knee should bow, of things in heaven, and things in earth and things under the earth; and that every tongue should confess that Jesus 'Christ is Lord, to the glory of ■God the Father.” So the exaltation of 'Christ is uni­ que. None other shares it with Him or can ever share it, But He was a man. And He had great difficulty in convincing His own disciples. His dearest friends, that He was indeed a man after He had risen from the dead. He had ap­ peared in His resurrection body to certain of the women who had gone to the sepulchre, and to (Simon Peter and to two disciples on the way to- Emmaus; yet the most of the dis­ ciples, .gathered together secretly be­ hind closed doors for fear of the Jews (John 20:1-9 , doubted whether the Lord had risen (Mark 16:13); (Luke 24:11). Suddenly “Jesus Himself stood in the midst of them, and saith unto them, Peace be unto you. But they were terrified and affrighted, and supposed that they had seen a spirit." 'They could not believe it was a man speaking to them, much less their own Master, the Lord Jesus; they thought a ghost had appeared. Patiently He asked them why they were troubled; and He said: “Be­ hold My hands and feet, that it is I Myself; handle Me, and see; for a spirit hath not flesh and bones, as ye see Me have. And when He had thus spoken, He showed them His hands and His feet.” When, even yet, they “believed not for joy.” He partook of the food they had with them, “a piece of a broiled fish, and of an honeycomb. And,,He took it and did eat before them.” Christ had risen from the dead in the body of which He was crucified He had not returned to his disciples as a spirit, but as a man in> His bodily presence. The tomb was empty; His body had left the tomb, for God had reunited the body and the spirit of His beloved Son, and they are re­ united today on the throne at the right hand of God. The disciples had failed to study their Bible, just as we have so often failed, and that-is why they were slow to believe. But He opened the Scriptures to them, and showed them that the entire Old Testament testi­ fied of Him and of that which had now come to pass; His crucifixion and His resurrection. He said to His unbelieving and troubled disciples: “Thus it is written, and thus it be­ hoved Christ to suffer, and to rise from the dead the third day: and that 'repentance and remission of sins should be preached in His name among all nations, beginning at Jer­ usalem. >k.nd ye are witnesses of these things.” The human body of our Lord was changed in the resurrection and gorified, yet the same body. And in that resurrection body, after leading His disciples out over the Mount of Olives to Bethany and blessing them “He was .parted from them, and car­ ried up into heaven.” The Father had exalted His (Son indeed. A wonderful sequel is coming—let us never fo'rget that. “And while they look steadfastly toward heaven as He went up, behold, two men stood by them in white apparel: which al­ so said, Ye men .of Galilee, why stand ye .gazing up into Heaven? this same Jesus, which is taken up from you into heaven, shall so come in like manner as ye have seen Him go into heaven.” FUIAzAlVrON IANI) STAF'FA MINISTERS MOVED Ministers in this district who have been appointed to other stations ac­ cording to the final draft of the Lon­ don United Church Conference were Rev. H. W. Hagelstein who goes from. Fullarton and Munro to Brighton and Chesterfield in Oxford Presbytery and Rev, R. B. Cumming who has served for a short time in Staffa and Mount Zion goes to Salford in the same Presbytery. Rev. W. A. Leitch comes to Ful- larton and Rev. G. Gilmore, to Staffa Rev James Anthony of Mother- well was named to the Pensions Fund Committee and Rev J. A. Gale, of Monkton and Willow Grove to Finance Committee. Rev. G. Kersey, Mitchell was en­ dorsed as commissioner to the Gen­ eral Council from nomination of Presbytery, -—Mitchell Advocate MARRIED FORTY YEARS Mr. and Mrs. William O’Brien, of Zurich, celebrated forty years of married life last week. This couple were married at the bride’s home in Hay Township, by Rev. Mr. Carrier, of Grand Bend. THE LATE J. F. McKAY The funeral .of John Fraser Mc­ Kay, a highly esteemed resident of Tuckersmith for eighty-one years, took place Friday from his residence interment being made in the Eg- mondville cemetery, Mr. McKay was born in Edinburgh, Scotland in No­ vember, 1842, and came to this coun­ try when two years of age and had lived all his life on the farm on the Sth concession of Tuckersmith, ■on which they settled. He was mar­ ried about 42 years ago to Miss Bes­ sie Ross of Grey County, who .pre­ deceased him by ten years. .Surviving are three sons, Oliver, at home; Charles, Tuckersmith, and Ross, of Hensall, and two daughters, Margar­ et and Bessie at home. The service was conducted by Rev. J. Reidie, of Cromarty and Rev. W. A. Young, of Hensall in the unavoidable absence of his pastor, Rev. H. C. Feast, of Seaforth, who was in Muskoka. The pallbearers were John and Robert Elgie, James Hay, Edward McKay, Hugh McMillan and Roland Kennedy morn body cTEERlNg, ')> UC-103G RADIATOR MOTO8 GUUTCH General Motors f 4-STAR USED staRT’N® lighting ignition JESUS EXALTED Sunday, June 21.—Luke 24:36-53. Golden Text Wherefore God also hath highly exalted Him, and given Him a name which is above every name. (Phil. 2:9). The question is often asked, “Who is the greatest man living today?’’ People think of one or .another of the greatest rulers, monarchs, dic­ tators, scientists oi’ humanitarian leaders; different anwers would come from citizens of different countries. But we do not always re­ alize, when we hear this question, that there is an answer beyond all dispute or question, regardless of ■one’s native country. The greatest man living today is Jesus Christ. For He is man today as well as God; as truly man as any man that has ever lived—and that is what we often forget, especially as we love to remember Him. as the (Saviour of sinners, the Son of God, the King of kings and Lord of lords/ the One exalted above all creation. It is important to keep this in mind as we study this closing lesson, be­ fore next week’s review, of our six months’ course in the Life of Christ. The topic of the whole six months’ study is Jesus Meeting Human Needs and He could meet human needs be­ cause He Himself, from all eternity, became human in His incarnation. The exaltation of Christ began, or rather was resumed, with His resur­ rection after He had died for the sips of the world. We may truly say “re­ sumed” because the Bon had been exalted .with the Father from all et­ ernity. In His high priestly .prayer, the night before His crucifixion, the (Lord prayed: “And now, O Father, glorify Thou Me with Thine own self with the glory which I had with Thee'before the world was” (John 17:5). From those infinite heights of glory the Son of God descended low­ er than He asks any of His disciples or followers to descend. The passage in Phillippians from which our Gold­ en Text is taken tells us that He did not hold His eternal equality with God a thing to be grasped, “But make Himself of no reputation, and took upon Him the form of a ser­ vant, and was made in the likeness of men; and being found in fashion as a man, He humbled Himself, and became obedient unto death, even the death of the cross.” In the death of the cross Christ, Himself sinless, “redeemed us from the curse of the law, being made a curse for us” (Gal. 3:13). He bore our sins in His own body on the tree that we—all who believe on Him— might be forever saved from the eternal life. Immediately at the close of that statement in Phillipians, telling of the seven downward steps of the Lord of glory, we read: “Wherefore at your General Motors Dealer SHOWH BY W L.((.n8c No. the best selectio "tradfe- •ins” in hi l3ei#1rred q for more! S||se( Dealer's stock! CA® today! 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