The Seaforth News, 1932-04-28, Page 7THURSDAY, 'APRI'L 28, 1932. t,
THE SEAFORTH NEWS.
firilel-r" fp,
(PAGE SEVEN,
TEXE GOLDEN
° TREA.SLTRY
May 1.
lord, enter not intojudgment with
. -may servant, Psalm cxl4'ii, Verily,
sexily. I' say unto you, He 'that hear
,efe my voice, and .beli•eveth on dvilti
;that semi me, hat everlasting i:i'ie, and
shall notcome into condemnation, but
as passed tom death unto life. John
v24. chap. viLi.Sd, I'sa'iah xxv:8.
;Since the judge hiinseif is our B'ro-
rites,' ,our brideg000m, tale Lord of
,deathand life, Tea, even aur Life.; xbe-
Ihners cannot die eternally, because
',they are passed fro.iti :death unto hie:
Tile fbalt owns 'the justice of God's
,juifgmletuts confesses himself guilty in
313 slings; and appeals from ithe Judg-
ment -seat to the mercy -seat; ;hien thalt
'flu: Lord will own and justify through
she righteousness of 'his Sou. For, if
'would. judge ourselves, we should
not ibe judged," Nay, we sh'ottld even
;sit in judgment together with ;Christ;
and surely, in that ;day, bwet shall not
vacs a., sentence of condemnation on
cm -selves.; 'much less- Will 'Christ, for
FARM FOR SALE
lam 11; Concession 4, HMS , Tuck -
menhir, containing 1.00 acres of choice
land situated on county road, Lai
- miles south of the prosperous' Town
of Seaforth, on C.NJR„ convenient to
scbea'o1s, churches and market's. This
amen is tall underdrained, well fenced;
asenb 2: acres of choice fruit trees.
itelsoil, is excellent` and in a good•
State of ,cirleivafion arid all suitable for
tate- growth • of alfalfa, no waste land.
Tits' farm is well watered with two
smile failing 'wells, also a flowingl
spring ia- the farm yard; about 40.
'acres' plowed and reading for spring
eeeding,,also 12 acres of fall wheat;
an cinder is seeded with ,alfalfa. The
+3oa-ldings are first class, in excellent
repair; the Nouse is brick and is mo-
dern in every respect, heated with fur -
oasts, hard and soft water on'. tap, a
Btree-piece bathroom; rural telephone,
alma rural' mail. The outbuildings con-
• stof 50x80
' barn feet with stone
sfee
stabling under; all floors in stable
eement; the sta'bl'ing has water sys-
tean installed. A good framedriving
shed, 24x48 feet; a 2 -storey henhouse;
26x36 feet. ` A brick pig pen with ce-
ment floorscapable of 'housing about
4t pigs. The house, stables and barn
have hydro installed. Anyone desir
ing..a first class home and choice farm
a3tonld see this. On account of 111
13ealtb 1 will sell reasonable. Besides
3be above I am offering .lot 27, con-
-cession 12, Hibbert, consisting of 100
acres choice. Land, 65 acres well under -
drained; 10 acres'mapie bush, all seed-
ed to grass; no waste land. On the
premises are a good bank barn 48x56'
leer and frame house, an excellent
well: The farm is situated about 5
miles from the prosperous village of
iffeasail on the C.1 R., one-quarter of
a• smile from school and mile from
eit web. this farm has never been
cropped much/ and' is in 'excellent,,
shape for cropping or pasture. I will
self these farms together or Separate-
ly tosuit purchaser. For further' par-
ticulars apply to the proprietor, Sea-
farth, R.R. 4, or phone. 21 on 1313,
Seaforth. ' THOS. G. SHILLING -
.
LAM', Proprietor.
D. H McInnes
chiropractor
Of Wingham, will be at the
Commercial Hotel, Seaforth
Monday, Wednesday and
Friday Afternoons
Diseases of of all kinds success-,
fully treated. 47
Electricity Used.
he loves tis more than we;,. do ou
selves.
'Who shall the Lord's ;elect condemn
'Tis God that justifies Itheir souls; -.
And ane:rcy, idle a'inigh'ty stream,
O'er ail their sins divinely rolls,
On the Psalms,—tPsa'l,n 18
25.lJit t
� 1 the , merciful tlotii1[t.
w.
show thyself msec 1ful, 'with at upright
man thou wilt show thysell'f upright.
26. With ,the pure' thou wit show
thyself pure, and •v ith the froward
thou wilt ;dhow fhyisel+f fro'w•:ard; II3eb,
with the', perverse thou wilt ,'wrestle,
or strive,
r,
The reasott;ib
is herr assigned w y
'God "recompensed Messiah 'according
to the 'cleanness of 'his hand's," ,namely,
be'cause he is just, in renide•ring to
every 000' according to his works, :Ile
Who is "merciful" to his brethren,
;shall obtain .thet
d t mercy; 'he who
is"upright" in his 'de'alings with
others ;will have justice lustnce done liini by
;the great Judge atin'st' his ini'quit"
ons oppre'ss'ors; he '.ilio is "pure"
from deceit and 'hypocrisy in the .ser-
vice of his :God, shall exp'erience in:
;himself a ;faithful and 'exact 'perform-
an'ce of the promises 'which God (lath
made to :suc'li; but the mail than, is
"Seaward," perver's'e and rebellious;
trust esapelot to ,grapple With an ari'ii,
which will either humble or destroy.
—See ,I:evi't. x cvi, „3, 4. &c. 23, 2'4, &c.
7 Kings viii: 32 1F'naq,iii.'314.
27. For thou wilt 'save the afflicted,.
or, lovily 'people, but Witt bring down
high looks.
"Go:d resiste'th :the' proud," sai,tht an
aposltl'e, "and gi'veth ' grace to :.the,
hundbie,"=lanes i'vlb. And, indeed,
what is the covenant of grace, ,but a
covenant to !humble pride and to exalt
humility; what was :it, ibut the humid-
ity of Christ, that subdued 'the pride
o'f ;Satan; and on what does the salves-
tion ;Of every ,man depend, but on the
issue of the contest 'be'tween these two
principles in his ;heart?
28, For (thou wilt, or, d'ol't .light my
eaubdle, or, lamp, the Lord my IGod
will, or, does enl'igh'ten my darkness.
An instance of
s eGods
favour toward
the lowly and afflioted was the salva-
tion vouchsafed to the suffering Jesus,
who, like David, after much tribula-
tion and persecution. under which Inc
sunk far a'' time, even so low as to the
grave itself, was exalted to glory and
honour. This change of co'nd'ition is
set /mall by 'that of a "lamp," from n
state of extimdtion to one of illumina-
tion, 'dankness being a well known em-
blem of sorrow and d'eaith, as 'light is
the established symbol o'f life and joy;
Remarkable are the words' of the Ohal-
dee Paraphrast upon tthis 'verse, cited:
"Becau'se 'thou (shalt en'ligh'ten the
lamp of Israel: the Lord my ,God shall
lead tine out of darkness hate Tight;
and 'shall make the see the c'ons'olation
of the age which shall carie to, the
just"
29• For by 'thee II have tun through
tor 'broken a troop; aid by my G9d
have I leaped offer a wall,
Through the power of his divinity,
the •Captain of .our salvation vanquish-
t±d- the 'host of darkness, and escaped
from the lseputchre, noitwith's'taudin:g
all their peecauti'ons to canaille him
there. Vain is every effort, by wh'opi-
soever'i't is made, agaies't the counsels
of Omnipotence. And let ns. relied 'for
Our comfort, that they who could molt
prevent the resurrection of. Ohrits,
.cannot detain 'the soul Of a iCh'ristian
in sin, or hi s'body its the grave.
•
Worms cause fretfulness and rob
the infant of sleep, the great nottr-
isher. Mother Graves' Worm Ex-
terminator will clear the stomach and
intestines and restore healthfulness.
Want and For Sale. Ads, 1 time 25c
.ro
ONLY
41'375 0
$6.50 ROUND TRIP
between BUFMLO and CLEVELAND
Autos, Silly size, seasea i®d for taniy° mV&. o ou
($4.7s July xis o Sopt. 0456 inolusivc)
Why drive when you can put your cat
aboard for less than the cost ore( and gas?
More restful,..cheaper ..'.and saves a day.
Steamers each way, every sight, leaving
ai 9:ob P,at„May 15th to November 1st.
1
Clevelcend-Pt, Stanley, Crnada Division
July 1st to Sdpr.;5di incl. an Friday, Satur-
day and Sunday only 63.IPO one way;
45.00 Rd. Trip. t501y our neatly 63„'745.
dfkacarLoral Tourist orTicket Agent for '
pew C&SLine Felder, rxl td,e0 Free Auto
./tap aud dot e's off our All E.t_JentS 7,44.
a'saUt CLEVELAND!. ATV lie 'LI 1.110 ''AL'IP'
3'lYa.1TY�a'5' C®Loiia'5 NtV.
Port Stanley, Canada • But&,1o, N•Y,
THE ' GARDEN
;The beauties of the countryside and
the attractive ;surroundings ofit'omes
of the working people and middle clas-
ses of the British (ales and Euro'pean
countries is frequently commented mo-
on by visitors: 'These ,coturtriesh'ave
passed through a similar development
to that iwhich Canada is now euperi-
encing, but they have trot been quite
so prodigal in destroyin+g'the ;natural
,beauties of the landscape. As their
wealth attd knowledge and time, for
leisaire increased there was a marked
development of horticulture, account-
ing 1't:t'a large measure for the unusual-
ly attractive 'country, and even: now
we Poole to them for many of our hest
trained gardeners and new ideas,
' Ilnixprovemen!t in beautifying the
surroundings of .'Catvadianhomes has
been/ made, particularly; in the urban
centre's, and here the various horticul-
tural .societies have played an import-
ant Partd lin therural sections 'nsuch
remains to ;be accomplished. "The far-
mer's time and that o'f his •family has.
been taken tip with home and farm
work for them to give much attention
to their surroundings. In the. country
trees, sthryymbs and vines as well, as
flowers should be used much more
freely. Some. individuals mid a few
co'umrn•uniities have effected splendid re -
stilts, The late' (Hon, Sydney Fisher
had some of the fineat specimens of
native and exotic trees /that could be
desired grawhtg oln his estate at
Knowlton, Que. 'Mr. Fisher planted
these trees years ago and beifore his
death had the pleasure of seeing itheni.
grow into their .full 'beauty arid,etature.
t'Vlan y trees and shrubs .could be ob-
tained from 'the woods quite easily, an
clearing the, forest or bush beatdti•ful
and syntmetrieal specimens should be
left in the field and along the roadside
or stream adding greatly to the attrac-
tiveness sof the country landscape.
Residential -suburbs of towns and
cities have been made attractive by
people collectively and individually
but 'too often [there is an artificiality
and similarity in their ,efforts or lack
E
o them to beautifytheir surround-
ings.
rrotr-tugs.
The home is the basis of a
beautiful town or cilty,' but in the
driveways, the streets, the parks and
recreation areas and the grounds of
the sxchools,, churches .an'd about public
buildings and industrial plants there
is a 'tremendous scope for improve-
ment.
There should be a continuous and
well directed effort and propaganda
to encourage the present and future
eitizea•s to improve and plant • the
'home surroupdhsgs, ,giving pleasure to
themselves' and making it a real asset
to the contmun'ity, (Further by ithe
collective effort and thought of the
municipality many more parks, play-
grounds and' driveways should be pro-
vided. 1By other ways Of town •plan-
.nxinglthe community should be .rade a
place of unrivalled beauty so that the
resident will be content to remain' and
the stranger drawn to its gates.
There are naw many oppodtuu'ities
in whioh bo display 'one's ingenuity a
and onigeinality both in planning and
its execution 'that it is only .necessary 1
to become interested in horticulture i
tto be'coine enthused, (Among the trees, c
shrubs and vines many of the finest
are native and of Mie Rowers, one has d
but to mention the rose, iris,, peony, 'h
gladiolus, sweet pea, dahlia, and the
other innumerable pereu'nial,c annual But :its the case -of IK'it an exception
and bulbous' fl'o'wering plants to real-
ize 'tile variety and ,possibility for of
,Canada has an 'increasing number
,0f nurserymen and seedsmen who are
in a position to supply plants and
seeds Of almiost everykind desired:
Some ie. ,pride tr
e rc len 1
0 o se v i hav-
ing-
n t es as
ung •exlten,sive collections or'the newest
and highest priced 'specimens, btnt oft-
en ;the
ft_en:;the very hest are some o'f the old
"s:tattdb >s” which
} are' modGratehy
priced and within the reach of every-
one. A +few (well chosen and cared
for plants will add materially to the
appearance even of the -smallest place,
The great .atbundauce-of -horticultur-
al Lilterature in books,:tbulletins, etc., is
a helpand inspiration to the no
P a vice as
well as the • expert, The numerous
amateur and h
professional orticultur-
al societies. should ;and. will be leaders
`i n. uialcittg Canadian Moines in its ur-
would have to be made. She abtract-
ed some very clever corresp'onden'ts
and this stimulated her own mlevs'ri
ness and she could ,answer a ,personal
itlq;uiry. in a way. not only satisfying
to•the correspondent but.delightful as
well to all her other readers, She
made kind
a of family of her de art-
Y P
neat and here is no question what. -
ever
t q t1 w
ever that her 'd' n
t t department was the
most distinctive on the paper, per-
haps the most •'widely read sn Canad-
1a0 journalism.
'Underlying Kit's success, was her
Y g
warmwheartesnes's�' 'S'he c'oul'd write
,an _occasion with 'Trish fire, but gen-
erally :it was ,Gte Trish kindliness and
uaderstandin thatsih'one through her
gg
words. She had known a good deal
of life for a wonnan sb young,;and at
the period when 'we knew her had
been twice m'arried, unhappily.. Ilii
the end as .'Mrs, Coleman, the wife of
ban' and .rural communities places of a stal'war't young, doctor, she found tate
great beauty and attractiou, peace o'1 that home life which had
been denied her in her years of activ-
F1OU`N•D,E'R OF THE WO. ity. 'at will perhaps surprise any Of
M•AN'O,S PAca. (K'it's old friend's who read these limes
to `know that she was a Roman
` The fonawling'fourbh column by J. Catholic, (Her maternal _ nu'cle was
V. McAree in 'The Mail and Empire •i'S, the • Rev. 'Tom Btater of Dublin, a
about "Kit," wile of the 'late `pr, nrenrber of the Dominican, Order, He
Coleman, a former Seaforth 'boy:' was a noted wit, mimic and orator,
and:tcame to the United States in,the
It is considered sound journalist- wake of 'James Anthony 'F'roude who
is practice to attention names in any was taring the country giving a news story or article, they 'being as lure of PInis'h affairs That roused the
essentialits this respect as dialogue is venerable priest to 1nd'ignat on.
to ;a novel. Nevertheless in what we' [We mention an incident about
wrote ee'cently, about the /Mail and Father Burke .because it is what we
E'mpire's sixtieth birthday we meat- might expect of one df Kit's kin. .I3•e
tioued no quanies, that we can remem- wsa'famous tier 'his pulpit orations 'but
ber, except these of the various P1'0 made .no preparations for them ex
pnieto'rs, We propose now to repair rept tc wsiite the peroration. (The rest
that emission by .mentioning a na'tne was spontaneous teiaquence, IA Dub -
which :may be 'unknown to.the ,present lin weekly. 'paper made a special feat -
generation of readers, but was ane a'f ure of fiis sermons and on . one 'ac -
the avast signitficant aeverfheless 'in rasion the shost.hand reporter lost his
the paper's history.iKit, That is the notes. [In despair he 'appealed to
name. )No ;writer who ever served (Father Burke, knowing file usually had
this paper was `•mare brilliant, None, no' copy of his addresses. :But .Father
we believe, ever had such to personal Burke told hdrn to make himself coin -
;following. There were thousands who Portable in a chair and bhen and there
opened the ,Saturday paper first at her delivered the sermon ,to him, or one
de ar. '
+meat which h was the
Woman's as n'e'arly Pike it as he could contrive,
,Kingdom, ,though .she ' had probably thus saving the •reporter'•s job; 'We do
c'rs many men as women readers. I3er not know 'whether `Ka could have be
fame Was nations, .perhaps inter- •come an 'orator, 'but . we kn'o'w. she
n'taioeal, for we believe she was the would have made a great actress. We
cleverest woman employed on any can 'remember the dratnati'c charm
paper on the American continent when with 'Which ahe'could invest the corn -
she
was et •her'best. We do not sup- nilon•eet story, and the kind of en -
pose she was ever paid more than $20 chantment she could distill in a: room
a week. 'When site died in Hamilton of friends when relating s'onte of her
'four people from Toronto stooa at own •meiving experiences.
Iter graveside, # A curious honor came Le her unask-
3tt must'have been some time in vhe ed at bhe time of the ,INantond jubilee
early nineties that site •came to To- in London in ,11597, !She ''retie in thel
Tonto from Ireland, and it was the late great procession beside ,Sir , Wilfrid
F. E. Sheppard 'who first encouraged :Laurier, Indy :Laurier not being able
her to, seek a living by her pen, eco- .to 'face' the fatiguing trip, and the
noniic necessity `.having made it neves gallant ,Prime Minister of Canada
sary that this highly cultivated and choosing the special ,representative of
widely travelled young woman, now The Mail and Einpite to bear: him
alone in, 'the world, should • become . carnpany. She went for this news -
self -supporting. So she came to this paper to report the war in Cuba, be -
paper 'and es'tablis'hed her'woman's ing one alt the first women on this
page. Its 'ieaatttre soon 'became her ,continent to serve: as war correspond -
correspondence •column, and she had eat. iB'ut the censorship and •hazards
tremendous 'fan mail' long before +o'f •commundcation were' •such that'she
the expression was coined. tWe think was able to send home. very little
t a'sa'fe generalization to say that the 'coipy,. In these days, w•he n coterie
nose intelligently a deptattnnent is n'ists are prone to turn their; columns
onducted the fewer will 'be"bhe letters into xconfession 'magazines and write
received, For instance, we have 'no albout'themselves, some of Kit's• lubi-
oubt that 'Rudy Vallee' receives', a m'a'te revelations abort her home life,
undred times as many letters as John her adored ch'il'dren and her hardly
Gelsworthy itt the course of a year. lens adored B'erlington terriers, •wou'id.
Go unter
•
We Ire Selling Quality
Books are Well Made, Carbon is Clean and Copies' Readily. All
styles, Carbon Leaf and Black Back. Prices as Low as You . Can Get
Anywhere. Get' our Quotation on Your Neat Order.
Seaforth
SEAFORTH, ONTARIO,
News
perhaps attract little attention, but in
'the era of a more reticent and fornrai1
journalism they Were almost epoch-
naark'ing, and gave her early distiirc-
tion, We do not know' how Kit's'
stories and com,meitts 'would read to-
day; we can speak: only of the intpres-
Sion they 'made ,thirty years 'ago, when
we recall one of the most vivid and
charming women with whom we ever
•eatne in contact,
CENTENARIES THIS YEAR
The year 119'3''2 has alar icular
P t ly
hong'lis•t'o'f celebration's; for'tneii who
made some considerable conitribu
Mian" in one field or another.: Remark-
ing on the long list, The 'observer
says: "If the world. knows nothing of
its greatest men, we shat during this
ood
year hear a
g deal o� the second
greatest, for Goethe, Sir Walter Scott,
;John Locke, Sir Christopher Wren,
(George Washington, Haydn, Pepys,
Lewis Carroll ('Charles Do'dg-son, the
mathematician) already has 'been eel-
ebrated with very grateful memory .by
hosts of readers, young and old, who
have reveled in the delights and whim-
sies of world-famous "Alice in Wond-
erland."
Committed for Trial.—Fred Bloom-
field, aged 45, of Hay 'township, was
up for a hearing before Magistrate
Reid in Magistrate's Cou're at Exeter
on Tuesday last o11 a- charge' of com-
mitting a serious 'offence against a
young Hay township girl, He pleaded
not guilty and elected to be tried by
judge and jury. Mr. . Frank Donnelly
appe'ared as defen'ce .counsel. The ma-
gistrate, after hearing evidence, ord-
ered Bdoontlfield to be committed for
trial at bhe nett court of competent
jurisdiotion. Bail was ,refused -, and
Bloantlfield is lodged in the county
jail, The offence carries a maximum
pen alty'af life 'im'prisonm'ent and
lashes.
Want and For S'al'e Ads, I time 25e;
LH'eaac� Thaae e
There are over 450 miles of
motor highways, 100 miles of
roads, 2.492 Hiles of trails and
1,100 miles of telephone lines in
the twenty national parks of
Canada, which cover an area of
over 13,800 square miles in differ-
ent parts of the Dominion,
Sas, Francisco was en fete re-
cently when the Canadian Pacific
liner Empress of Britain arrived
there from Honolulu for a two day
stay on her 128 -day winter cruise
of world ports. About 80 addi-
tional passengers joined the ship
at Sait Francisco and another fifty
at Los Angeles for the last lap of
her voyage through the Panama
Canal to New York. le
"The Mineral Position: of the
British Empire"' ie the suggestive
title of a paper by Dr. Charles
Cantsell, Deputy Minister of
Mines, which will be the leading
topicfor discussion at the annual
meeting of the Canadian Institute
of Mining and Metallurgy, in
Montreal on April 5, 6 and 7. This
same topic *i11 provoke much die-
cussfon at the forthcoming Im-
perial Economic Conference.
Belief that economic conditions
were gradually improving and that
the forthcoming Imperial Econo-
mic Conference at Ottawa would
be one of the big historical events
in the development of the Domi-
nion, was expressed by Senator
Gideon Robertson, former Minis-
ter of Labor, who sailed on S.S.
Montcalm from Halifax recently
as Canada's chief delegate to the
16th annual conference of the
InternationalatGeneva.
Labor organization
Canada's rapid change from an
exporter of raw minerals to an
exporter of finished and semi-
finished products will be web set
forth at the annual meeting of the
Canadian Institute of Mining and
Metallurgy in Montreal on hprii
5, 6 and 7. A number of important
papers will describe the new
smeltersffected andthis refinerieschange. that have
e
With five steamers in 'service
between Port McNLcoll and the
head of the Lakes 'during the
coming season, the Canadian Paci-
fic Railway announces that they
will now accept shipments of
freight at eastern points destined
to points in western Canada, via
Port McNieoll, Ont., and their
lake and rail route subject to delay
sailing.at Port McNicollpending the first.
Changes in the management of
Maritime Province summer hotels
of the Canadian Pacific P.ailway
will shortly become official. Joseph
A. Cashman who managed tne
Lakeside Inn, Yarmouth, N.
and ie at present in charge or the
Place Viger Hotel in Montreal,
'will become manager of tet• At';
tluin Hotel, St, Andrews, N 13., t ,, 1
he will be succeeded in tlne nvr'-
agement of the Lakesidz I:in
Jeremiah Daley, ,Ir. now r • f
clerk at the Cornwallis Ina, Lt. -
ville, N.S.
Arbong deeds of bo-oin^1 it
the rescue of th0 G'. a , i
:salvage ship I eitad.eer by 'tr
seamen of the S S i, ont�
eently will rank htth A ,, _
conoid by Captain i I ,, 1 w r 1
steered the Mont,aln t 1, ;. 3
lea for the h ubt t and .01;11 11 :•c r,
heavy seas runnitta, ,het n t n
Seconal 011ieer mnighi, t,:, ,
"00pretty r rut .e r, wr t s , I,'i
'00 f' 1 w:wh�,,
men-icf J. G 'ass, of Molise
former M.P. for that elf ••a t, •s
a passenger and wit ,• • , ,1 :r
rescue from start to 11.24:-.u.