The Signal, 1930-6-5, Page 6ur
t9-Zlnraday, June 6, ltieo
THE COCKSHUTT
IMPLEMENT SHOP
has removed to new
quarters on Kingston
street.
Implements and Repairs. General
Ezpert Service on all Cockshett
Machinery.
Allis-Chalmers and United Tree -
tori.
Baer & Straughan
TELLptioNt S9s
The Leading Men's Store
Everything that's new
in Men's Wear
Hand Tailoring and
Special Order to }'our
Measure
Ch as. Black
Phone 219 . God*rieh
We carry a good -too k of
Electrical Appliances,
Fixtures, etc.
Electric Wiring of All Kinds
Frank McArthur
West Street Electrical Shop
Telephone 82 Godenc h
Sunday Afternoon
-0-
By ISAHEL 1*AUILT(IN,
Goderieb, Ont.
Jesus. -till lead on,
T111 our rest be won;
Aid. although the way be cheerless.
We will fullnw•, calm tool fearless:
Guide us by Tby hand '
To our Fetherhtnd.
If the wny In' drew.,
If the foe he near,
Let not faithless tears o'ertake us,
Let not faith Nutt hope forsake us:
$'or, through many a foe,
1'u oils home we go.
--,N. L. 7.tuzeue orf.
PA AER
cutter ns net to turn In auger on
Nine who has wronged w!, seeking his
hurt. lest we Increase the borrows of
the wired and taint our own coalei
titl; the poisoned sweetaees< of rt'-
,,•nge flake its determined' to loco
,sen at cost to- our pride. that so we
may he soldiers of The Is•iur on earth.
\Mete. -Walter ltanschtnbuscb
S. S. LESSON FOR JUNE 15th. 1930
Lesson Tuple---Jesus on the Croon.
Leeson Passage -Matthew 27;33-50.
1:olden 1...%t-IIrim. w 12:2.
I'.Iate, 1:'iue faihsl iu bio :it -
:, rapt* 10 hour the inultitn 1te ehuov'
• release Jesus. hamiCi'7T1m over to
Resuan soldlers to be crucified.
ueto u" doubt hail had plenty
f prnctlui• In eruelfytng Jews. It
ns putt of their vrdtuar- work •!!!.... troublesaome times. They were
o, this initnnee Iguortutt of what they
were doing, nud therefore they wen,
nllthas. (''Itri',t -old that Hitu+elf:
r'('he)• knownot what they do" Hav-
ing finished their work. "sitting down .
they .watched 'Nim there." As they
x'st fed what did they hear and who:
did they see?'lta the first place they
saw s,nte risen passing on their suit
to the city. We Infer from the re-
marks of these uteri that they were
the buyer.. unit selier.s whom Jesus
end on two occasions driven from the
Temple. These men now remembered i
HIS words in answer to their form.!,
er eh•mend fur n sign. '9leatroy this
temple. and In three days 1 will raise
It up." (John 2:19),
It was perfectly safe to ridicule -'-a-* _,-- -- - B.
THE SIGNAL,
J
GODERICH, ONT.
WHAT'S WRONG AND WHERE?
NE!�f r rt
Ranier k
hitter ARE II n15TAKES IN THIS PICTURE
How good are you at finding mistakes? The artist has intentionally
made several obvious ones in drawing the above picture. Some of them
■re easily discovered, others may be hard- See how Tong It will tale
YOU to find them.
LOOK FOR SOLI.TION IN NEXT WEEK'S SIGNA1.
Solution to "{{'hat's Wrong and Where" in last week's Signal.
4 YOUNG LADY WITH DOG LN GARDPIV
SCHOOL REPORTS
6. S. No. 3, WEST WAWANOBH
9bllowluag 1s the report of 8.8. No. 3,
West Wawauusb, fur rite month of
May:
Jr. IV. --Jean 1'urduu 70. Robert Mc-
Allister 70.
sr. pit. --400 iyoran 04. 11a Fowler
dtt•, Elwood deowler 'ie. i- ruest (tur-
nlu 31•.
err. 111.-dielen I►uruiu $$, ilelen
Fowler 71. -
Jr. 1L --tarok} Irwin 80, Elmer Tor -
an 61.
8r. I. --fere Foran.
Jr. I. --Roy Fowler, Norman Foran.
Thome1. Dialled • mla*erl one or more
examinations.
Number on roll, 13; average atteud-
nnee. 10.45,
ti'LADYS A. Ht)III/INR. Teacher.
SALADA quality w►nl always
be the finest you can buy
PP
SALADA"
TEA
'Fresh from the gardens*
rse
S. S. NO. 1S. WORT WA*VANON11 ItHAN(tg DItsUOVft tllvS.
8. tbnrlels bind Ca-rnia Marb{s--Two
Toe following 1s the report of S.
NO. 15. Weer 11'swnnosh, for the mouth
Sr - iV--t:rnerne ('howney " 8.5' per
cent., Willie Craig 73, G;onhn noble -
son 117.1.
Sr. III -Verne Plowman 0,3.2
per
e,•itt Jean Robinson 74.1.
Jr. 111. -Melvin Craig G4 per ewet.,
Sala l'honupeun. atwent.
• Sr. I1.-ltewart C4amney 63 per
44•11t.. Flirt Plowman Ell nett
Itob{nsnn fit.
Jr. II.-'F:ehea Plowman On per cont.,
Howard Thompson 114. Edwin Thomp-
son absent.
sr. 1. -Jean Ward 73 per cent.
Xuntiier on the roil. 14': average at•
•udaner. 124.
L. 1. .1(r1rXs1t IN, Teacher,
It
NEM
Following is the May report for
t'.S.S. No. 1:
V. Kathleen William** (not rank-
ed) .
Sr. 1S'.=Wilmer Ruth- 4ge (an per
cent., Eileen F1'agan 67, Keith Feagan
90.
Sr. 11I. -Kenneth Wllifams 71 per
went., ilcnson Fengan 63.
Jr. III. -Donald Williams lig per
cent., Winnlfred Watson 00, Gordon
!Williams (3. Benson Kerr 3R•.
'8r, Ii. (total marks 1300)--PhylKe
3 -Stone and brick both used in well 4 --Wrong kind of tail on dog.
incorrect. :r• -.hatchet not a garden tool. .
• W
3 -Bats on. iron gate de not match. 6 -.Watering pot 9taadle on side in -1
wl
tyre -t. W
err **(M, Kenneth Kerr 410•.
Jr. II. (total marcs 13110)-Jaek
Ilion 100, Doris Willams 897', El -
n Ryan 7HCl, Arnold Young 900, Glen
Miami 507, Margaret McKnight 357•.
I. (total marks 1400)--Lawrenee
illlams 1296. Harry Fengan 744,
uby Wilson 994, Helen Free 420•, EI -
•r Mewhlnney 4013.
Primer -Good -Ma rga ret Waturn•,j
olet Free•, Hilda Kerr•, II
Those marked • missed one or mora
ya during May.
Number on the roll, 26; average at-
ndance, 23.815.
GRAOE BLAKE. Teacher
3 -Two kinds of fruit on tree. , 7 -/No boles in water spout.
that spn'eh now and so with Insulting
tones they ,erfwl out to 'HIM: "Thou
that destroyest the templet and butld-
est it In thnr day*, salve Thyself. 1f
thou he ttJ* Son of (:oft, creme down
from the cross." Jnat at the time this
eying of Jesus was being ridiculed it
was being •verified• All was coining
to pass just as he had tend He had
rterer said. "f wi11 destroy this tear
tie." He only intimaters that it they
OOT -OP -Thur CALLS-Q*ICEER AND CHEAPER THAN RVS14
She almost tr ; n.bled
at the thought
Everting rates Ott "Any-
one" (ita,ioreto-rtw-
rioa) rails NOW begin
e 7 p.n. Nigh, "rose
begin of N.30 p.rs. /tort
girt "Long Di;iante"
Ibe somber yon raver
-it ip-tdr op the ser-
vice. if yon dow'r brow
tee Jir,ont 'mother,
"information" will
1er04 If rp for you.
Mrs. Kane was a timid soul -no doubt
about it! Modern efficient,' rather
terrified her.
She wanted so much to talk to hcr sister
in a town 80 miles away because a friend
had told her how she enjoyed weekly
long distance chats with her home. But
she didn't know how to go about it.
"There's nothing to h," her friend
told her. "Just ask the operator for
'Long Distance' and when she answers
tell her the number you want. If you
don't know your sister's number, ask
'Information' -it's so very simple."
Mrs. Kane felt encouraged. She tried
it out one evening; found the operator
helpful; and in two minutes was talk-
ing to her sister and enjoying herself_
thoroughly.
And the call cost hcr only 40 cents -
the evening station -to -station rate (after
7 p.tp.).
The Friday night 3 -minute talk to her
sister is now an institution. h has made
such a difference to know she is so
near! And Mrs. Kane calls after 8.30
p.m. now, at a cost of -only 25 cents -
the night rate.
14341 destroy Ms holy. Ile would rape
again In three days. The first pa
, of that deelaretlon was )wing fulflii
the second part was to be fulfill
three day,. later.
Others joined In mocking Him nn
spoke the truth, although they did IN
i renllze its real meaning when the
!said. "He saved others: Himself H
cnouot save." With one movement of
ills limbs ire could base lunsened the
nails, and earth!!stepped upon the earth!!
lnst•au1 Ne let the order of Eternal,
Wisdom take its course. -Be bad come'
for one purpose and under the fire o
sllefut men's taunts He was calm, gen
tie, and full of peace. But the crown
log crime of men. the erime of killin
the Prince of Life, was not to
without some expostulation of Nata
itself against K. For three hoe
those bunging upon the emotes were
bidden from the gaze of the watchers.
It tests a darkness which science is
unable to explain. 1t was not the
darkness of night, for 1t began at
twelve o'clock In the day. It was
not the darkness of sn eclipse, for ft
min then Rall moon. end It 1. only at
the new moon that ecllpee of the spm
,-nu take place. God was likened to
make Nature visibly sympathetic with !S
the peestlon of 'His on
tftor this the soldiers heard a cry
from the central cross, but it was not
in worn* they could understand: "M7God, m7 God, why hast Thou forsakes
Me?" In 'Voices from Calvary' the
author sty+ of this cry that In It we
have the terferet example of trust in
trial. Just then, when He was beingerminermined In weerknene. Itis cry was
"My Strength. My .Fttrength." Although
In that hour of darkness lie doers not
utter that happy cru "sty Father." Pie,
k
ss the peret Man- idling fest to lila
hock, held cis thrtmgh at) the blows
of the wares and tallow's: and even in
this short burst of language In agony
1 applied to God the word "My" twice
over, appropriating the "1.1ring
Ntrength" as Hie very own.
it I time, when he stopped the children on R
rt their way honer from school. "Ari. n"
J- ye gettiu'- yer tannin 7" he quel?%ii.
ed "Teta." they hooted in reply. VI
.%t this the fisher lad stopped his
d mending and looking thoughtfully da
4 and longingly atter the ehihlre'n, said
71 '1 wlah't I cud." to
e As 1 Iewokeel back. he was still rest
R�
Daae
re
rs
WORLD MISSIONS
"I Wleh't 1 Cad"
mals little glimttst• of n 1•.abrndnr
lad is by Miss Alice V. Brower, wbd
mis'ltt wane flint. teaching nn the Lab-
rador ('oast. 1t Is reprinted .from
some of her memories of Labrador,
given In the British Mlasltinary. It
Is n pleasure to know that the United
Church also hot missions on the Lnh-
raelor, helping jolt snot. hungering
hearts.
But of all the memories the note
that statutes mut moat (rrnmpieeously Is
runt of a fisher lad of sixteen, sittlhg
in the end of an old boat on the shore,
mendtuz note and !ails. 1 con see
Mtn so clenrty, as hr ledged that rtcsor
HE` DA HESS
gener-
an-
noying tha titrgerou , et,
I rep' *ted headaches are a
warning that your s►to mach,
through its delicateir erve sys-
tem, may affect other organs
of the body a d cause serious
ailments. Don't just endure a
headache. Relieve it quickly
icine, made
roots and
D. IF 12 U. N (- N'S
NU-ERB
artar front
CAMPBELL S DRUG STORE
with this n
entirely fr
herbs
ing his chin in his hand and gazing
far vet to se -a. I sundered what the
thought.. of that poor lad could be.
iso the WiqA ba,ck to school, I took bin
:t poeket uhrebo'k with an Er'ersbarp
clipped to it. At the top of many of
the pages. I had written his name
1n hold 'script. When I gave it to iltm
he just pushed it into his is"•ket, Pray-
ing in his embarrassment simply,
"Thank'e, Mils"
Bdt-it was a very different he)
abut came op ,0 the se•htsoltsnwe a
troupic• of days later with the note
hooi; fiileed with zigzag writing which
he had done out in the Moat while the',
other man dbt the rowing or the fisb-
ing- tie he pushed a new notebook
Into his pocket. he said, oh. so earn -
...ray : "Dr. yer suplo,se. Taehie, do yer
e0ppoee. some day. now ell glt all my
larnh,' 'e"
As I watc•hal him *curry down the!
Rile of the ell?? and put .oft In hie .
Moat, I thought, "Yes, he'll get him
iarnlu' if Prime of its will so pattern
our lives that they In turn will mak,•
opportunity for others."
-The Missionary Flesh ,o
ORE GOOD RECIPE
MAKES A COOK FAMOUS
The season for green pear and is-
)utragus tr with tee and u-ivg these. i
with rt few bits of tsaern. makes tine of
the moat pleasing dishes imaginable.
'Che casserole of green peas and as- ,
panagus Jr mage as fellows:
t'nt all !Neer, of baern In sntnll
pears and brawn in a 41(111et. Prepare
two e•npfals of well -neap -tined thin i
whirr -aver. In it grea,tvl easst•role ar
range In alternate layer! 1'1 cupfuls
fresh cookie! asparagus tone hunch t .
cut In pierces end. 11a cupfuls fresh
erxokett iees. Add the bruw'ued saute
and two tahlealwsone of ',neon to the!
white sneer ..tel pour over the vette- i
tables. (over top with scnaonrl masbed i
iatntot's and bake for twenty minutes j
at 400 degrees F'. Thin will Nerve etz
people.
f, When Ink (lives Evidence.
Ink plays an important part In 161
drtt•etlori of criminals and in Pettlieg
legal disputer where the age of docu-
ments Is in question.
Modern blues -flack Inks can be dis-
tinguished by the tact that they con-
tain blue dyes, which differ in quan-
tlty and nature, sayel knahandwriting
expert. Chemical tests and optical
eZaminatlon enable the expert to dis-
cover their characteristics.
It Is often possible to teIl the age
()fun ink. The older Inks had a wool-
ly effect, as compared with the crys-
talline and clear-cut appearance Of '
modern inks. In claims for old peer-
ages, documents have bean produced
where the age of the ink proved that
they were not as old as tbey walk f
claimed to be,
Starting Junior Potato clubs.
Encouraged by the succeess of boys
and girls stock clubs througbout the
Province of Nova Scotia, In the rale-
. log of better herds, for the past nine
years, a series of junior potato club*
1* bsing organised under Government
awblcek.
The Modern Apa+'tereeit.
An apartment house built largely
of glees Its planned for ereetlon in
New York City. no masonry being re-
quired either for walls or partitions,
the latter being of an Involuting
materiel Irks than an Inch thinks,
4
a,83t.4og Tone of Soft Coal.
General eI$an.lon of the coal min -
Ing Industry of Nora Frntla In keen
111 the annual report The coal Out-
put for the fiscal year was 9.229,4911
boa* aa compared with 41,026,20/1totes
GODERION, • ONT.
In tall.
Hake shops in Canada.
• In 1926 the number of bakery
, eftablishments reportuek to the flont-
faten Bureau tit ttttttsues w,,a 2.482,
with it capital investment of 944.-
3 7 7.4 4 ft;
44;377.449; gross value of output of
$71,227,097 and a total employment
of 15.422.
•
lluilding Societies' Good Mork.
Building MocleUes In iiugland
have, In the past, enabled more than
2.000,000 people to buy their owa ; t
homes. while another half million oto j1
now doing so.
Women Discover Asphalt Besi.
kheryune hoc heard of Carrara
marble. In 1925 a party of English
tourists a;ploring the muuntalov of
Q.rrara tuuud a dirt) 'block of mar-
ble which had evidently fallen from a
cliff overhead. One of the visitors
who had surer knowledge of geology,
noticed that tits stuue had a Wok tfut
that was uuurual. The sample was
taken to England, where it wee tuuud
to be a new variety. A lar}e quarry
ham been opened and Is proving very
profitable.
Two women, Mrs. Wilson and Mist.
Spencer, were ctussiue the Notate
desert, in Suuthert. t'aHturnta,,luule
tag for gold. They were not suceesa-
ful, and our night, 'feeling very dig•
eouraged, camped on -the bank • of a
small creek and lit a Lre to cook theta
supier. The Ore began to throw out
dark, Ili -smelling smoke, so that i1
was•impVsil(It- to go near it or cook
on it. and the poor, tine( wosaes
were forced to ccilect more Owl sad
light a fresh are. In `the *1441* of
the night UL'b. Wilson sprang up mid-
i denly, "1 know what Hie!" she cried,
1 "What on earth are you Ialklty
about?" demanded the other wosaaa,
Asphalt,' w•u the answer; and sh0
was right. That bud proved much '
more valuable than a gold mine, for
thick ueporlt of asphalt covered
ny acres and made the fortune of
many others braider' its disco
AFTER 'IM ' Y 4AR$.
Nast Meets Mother After I".rel-Prop
Yearn /Operation
Stranger then action and more
wbleb
Moving than a Mm hi stop'
tomes from St Omar, France.
-The ,.cone Is a ear at Qulvrechaln
Among the customers is an elderly
Woman A miner enters. He has a
story to tell He relates how his
father abandoned his mother In the
very same village of Gunn -chain la
1115. and took him to America when
he wee three years of age. His father
died shortly atter his arrival, and het
was adopted by Poles, who made a
miner of him- !Eventually be return-
ed to France, working In a pit at
Reviles and parsing as a Polish min-
er. The elderly woman put questions,
and the miner wan astonished when
the woman jumped up in great es-
eftement and declared that he was
not a Pole, but a FYenrbntan, and
bat be was her son. who was taken
MED her years ago.
e
1
Coal and Wood
Genuine Hard Stove Coal
Chestnut Coal
Pea Coal
•
Coke
Pocohontas (2 by 4 egg)
• I can supply your wants in
any of the above fuel. Prompt
service and reasonable price..
'
L. FLICK
Telephone 178j Coderich
i
Be Consistent
KEEP YOUR PLUMBING:
AND HEATING AS VP TO
DATE AS THE RIte'T OF
YOUR HOME.
Es tim ates cheerfully
submitted
John Pinder
Phone 127. Box No. 131
. It sings a song of crispness!
YOU CAN'T imagine a more
tempting cereal! So crisp it
actually crackles when you pour
on milk or cream.
And how these nourishing
rice bubbles do taste! Crisp with
toasted goodness, rich with
flavor. Children welcome milk
when it comes with Rice Krispies.
Serve this crunchy cereal for
your own midday meai,4With
sliced fruits or honey. Delicious
for breakfast, lunch or dinner.
And alae kiddies' supper --so
easy to digest.
Good to munch right out of
the package. Sprinkle into soups.
Use in candies, macaroons, in
place of nutmeats.
OrderRice Krit.pics at hotels,.
cafeterias, on dining -cars. At all
grocers. Made by Kellogg in
London, Ont. Always oven -fresh
in the seaxtite inner ,real wrapper.
MICE KRISPIES
1
sr
4,
i