The Huron Expositor, 1931-07-31, Page 211;:
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e.
TIit3 WILSON FLY PAD,
Co HAMILTON, ONT..
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honor er tette him luta..t�i� w',.:
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the QR t fxoau.
QW?�, by the' Ari 1. iA1L, "[� Se.�) /�
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and �ur� � both sugOg�estin� royare �y
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tom• to Jw'Xu.' The chapter he w'as.
leading was the fifteatlijrd •of Isaiah,
lawn verses of which are here quoted
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qbs l health, ,
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mine slid, withdrew
the eases In a daze Anemia left
the millet TQOm, On aaaot ler Qcca-
Sion l e sternly rebuked Samuel Un-
.. Batter, Exports.
tient to which butter is again
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(x:33).
,
The eunuchs desire to know and
his request that '
q des ip converse with
him was the work ter his hand and he
preached Jesus. The man heard, un
derxseood, and ielded himself, request-
yielded , ell
in that Philip baptize him. The nee-
g p p
essay question beingasked and the
y 4
proper answer being'ven the two
PR
stopped bythe wayside andtheeg
'pF Y' new
became C,}iriS-
('
,iealtb;,
be, y grows up
to be a success
in life and alhair
credit to his
pats.
le your' child
h a s a c o l d ,
Sim .le fever
�' ,
tongue
he is inti-
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a.:;c:..ceipts
mama .::;<`Z ; =P
...•,^...
„'' ....` .... ,
,
<ease
termeyer, *educing that redoubtatble
forensic warrior - to the import-
ance of a third -year law student.
He fought with Murphy of Tam-
p y
many Hall but later they • became
friends becauseof a common addle-
;tion to golf, Seatbury proving to be
only
the n y player whom Murphy could
defeat. Perla thegaudiest
ps scalp
he has in his belt is that of William
'
•growing a15 aa factor in the export
trade of Canada 'is shown by the ,mar-
kat report issued b the Dominion
p'
y and Cold Storage Branch for•
the week ending July 4, 1931. Total
exports fram 1Vlay 1 to es 4 this
were •53 T2 packages�x*
year, 8 paG age as tom-
pared with 1;SS4 packages for the
•corresponding period last
p g P 1: year, Re-
at Montreal r
fb, the per-
121
sod, tot g 25. 9 package's, show1
•
S c`
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; `*�`'`
ti �. �,
`<�<
w
convert a professing
P g
flan
table listless or
has no appetite give Baby's Own Tab-
Randolph. . rs whose
p Hearst o e nomination
for governor he defeated almost
le in 1918,
,
an increase of 89,268 parka es over
1930
vf:„`
lets. are an effective laxative---
They
sin g -handed when he fast-•
�d
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WORLD MISSIONS
The Peace River Country
safe even for the youngest infant.
25 cents a package at any
• pa g y
druggist's.
cued upon the newspaper publisher
the stigma of pro -Germanism. f
ct
Farm Products Trade,
Canada's total trade . in farm .pro-
ducts (experts and imports) for the
,1, fe,!-°rw►�
,, ,,
`° - • 1s �A
i--- ` � _� -ems
In our newspapers we read many
wonderful things abodt the Peace
B� •s OWN TABLE
�'s
•+-Y• --1
ROARING OF LIONS RESOUND IN
-• a- i '• - •-•a• •-'etna la
year ending March 31, 11131, amount-
ed to . $455,720,155. Of this amount
$145,732,632 imports
:
'
manners were somewhat more • gime-
ious than those of the old timer, ev-
en if their knowledge of baseball was
less,. and they had never been taught
to:bate an umpire. Sa, the old timer
finding himself in a minority and no
longer supported, and surrounded by
kindred spirits began to moderate
his transports, and felt somewhat'
abashed, comforting himself with the
reflection that the game was no longer
what it used to be.
•Commenting on these and other
changes, Stetson Palmer offers the
opinion in the New York Times ,that
on the whole the New York 'baseball
crowds are the fairest to be found
anywhere. They are ready to ap-
plaud the good work of an enemy
g y
player, and forgive errors of their
own favorites. The fact that they
haere had more than their. share of
pennants in both lea goes has also
had a kind o£ mollifying effect upone
them. But in Brooklyn it is differehe
There the fans of all kinds are
dreaming of pennants, and in the
league race their feelings are said
,admirably
to be y expressed by a
slight paraphrase of the German
Hymn of Hate:—
Hate:—
Cubs and Cardinals, they matter not,
A blow for a blow, a shot for a shot;
But wherever the Brooklyn 'banner
is flown,
There is r one foe and one alone -
The Giants
Such feelings, of course, make for
box office returns, and no
doubt are encouraged
g d by the owners
•of ball teams. But the idea is spread -
ing that the more civilized a city as,
the less excited it will become about
its professional baseball.
-
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alt'+' <:: erne `f a e .
,
-` '. :`':? ■ �' .. `-
'z}.a:,. ;;;^z ;;;K ^ ;::,;: -•The
River Country,' the Last Great West
yr
as it is sometimes called,
story is told that long ago a
(Dr. Williamsej tis
•
_'
TORONTOp°
•
Although we are a veteran and in-
were and $309,-
$
487,523 exports. Trade with the Unit-
ed Kingdom amounted to ,a total of
g
• h
`' •> • " ~° + CHEVROLET *
defatigable non -joiner of all
$213,109,820„ of which 56,235,159'
The world's lowest
white man g
persuaded warring Indian
g j societies
were imports and
p $153,874,661 eii-
EFORE you invest in an
• Y Y
motor car, consider carefully
the advantages of obtaining a''
General Motors value. You know in
priced Six. 14 masala
listing from $610 so
ys�0 ar factory, razes
• PONTIAC +
6 models Lig from
tribes to smoke the pipe of peace on
the banks of this river, and as an
eternal witness of their pledge the
named it Peace River. P g Y
As early as 1792 Sir Alexaander
•
seemed that he was about to become
Governor of New York State,
was the Democratic nominee and
'Whitman,
,He
his
and organizations whatsoever, we #eel
that we have no right to cast gloom
upon the Lions convention by with-
holding a word of welcome to it. This
is the first time the order has met in
ports. During the same period im-
ports of farm totalled ,8 the Unit-
ed States totalled $50,557,870 and ex-
ports amounted. to $42,378,616.
advance that your car is specifically,
designed and constructed for
Canadian climatic and road condi-
tions. You can be confident that its
Canadian materials and craftsman-
flip, are.of the finest.•
Gratifying, too, is the fact that
wherever you maytravel through-
g
out North America, the compre-
pensive terms of the Owner Service
Policy our mind ofpossible
Y
service relieve v s. To facilitate our
py
se the GMAC, General Motors'
purchase you can buy out of income
onand
economical, time -payment plan,
gals to $1,015 at
factory, taxes
, OLDSMOBILE •
6 models, luting from
$1,065 to $1,230 at
factory, axes extra.
McLAUGHLIN-
B U 1 CK •
22 models, listing from
$1,290 to $2,66f at
factory, taxes extra.
+ 90$CADILLAC •
over so models avail-
able, ranging from the
Cadillac v -a at $3,520,
to the Cadillac $3, 2 at
to rJae and up m the
Czdillac V-16 with cast
tom bodies for $15,oau
more. All prices
at factory; taxes extra,
Mackenzie and his men, is their en-
deavor to find a way through to the
Pacific Coast, travelled upthe Peace
River in canoes, and discvered the
Great Northwest Pass in the Rockies,
On July 1,st, 1929, the Peace 'River
0 1e dedicated a cairn to the mem-
P
Ory of Sir Alexander's visit.
Until about -wentyears ago onlyBecker,
y g
a few scattered settlers had treked in
from the south in ox -carts and wag-
ons. Since 1911 the population has
grown to about 40 00 0 and there is
room for a million more.
While most of the settlers are Eng -Y
lisp speaking folk from all parts f
Canada (some of them .second gen-
enation Europeans), from the West-
opponent was Charles
pp
had won his reputation as a district
attorney in New York,the crownmight
upon it being his prosecution
Becker, the police lieutenant
brow ht about the murder of Rosen-
g
that. By another coincidence Sea-
b y presided at the second trial
I ur
and his charge to the jury,
objected to by the defence, was
great help to Whitman in securing
his conviction. At the time of
election Theodore Roosevelt as lead-
gi , strong
er of the Progressives, was a
factor in New Yorkpolitics. Seabur
himself had been a member of
party and a supporter of Roosevelt's.
It was natural that he should
expect that Roosevelt would swing
who
of
who
of
of
the
this
Canada, and the reason it comes now•
is •'because the hotel accommodation
herept so much than be
expected in an American city of the
same size. Also our drinking water
is purer and our death rate lower. 'Mr,
Charles Ring, one of the must active
of Lions, assures us that we were
mistaken in our assumption that the
chief qualification for membership in
the order is that one has been unalble
to join either the Rotarians or the
Kiwanians. It is true that the Lions
came into existence later than the
other clubs which it somewhat re-
sembles, but it seems to be also true
,
that if anyone couldn't get into the
Rotarians or the Kiwanians he could
not into the Lions Zither, and
Ontario .Farm Costs.
• Hired labor is the {biggest single
item of cost in the operation of fruit
farms producing apples as a main
crop in Ontario, according to a state-
meet appearing in the Economic
Annalist,official organ of the Agri-
cultural Economics Branch at 'Ottawa,
at va a survey of 148 farms located
_ Hiroo hoot thea
F 'various pointsgp-
'Pte producing districts of the prov-
ince operating costs are reported as
follows:—
$ %
Hired labor 927 31.4
Family labor 227. 7.7
Total labor ... 1,154 39.1
Repairs, buildings and
ern and New England States, and
get
146 5.0
Look in the e as/tfle'ime- pages o, your
`telephone book under "General Motors
dealer.
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fram the British Isles others from
Europe speak little English, and there
the progressive vete to him. It
dust as natural for Roosevelt
upset all calculations by urging
was
to
Pro-
there is probably so such social out -
cast,
The Lions organization began with
...
Feed boo h
Feed bought 243 8.2
Fertilizer bought . , , 118 4.0
Cars" for address of the nearest
°TORS
PRODUCTS on1Zy 15
is a settlement of between six pun-
gressirv'es io support Whitman.
The
Spray materials 131 4.5
N
s. kz •
r " '
•
i u ;.7
3 ��
,,.-A6.:-�-.'•", . �'„ •••
dred and seven hundred French famil-
les, Great changes have taken place
g
since the early days and the motor
car, the railway, the radio, and even
aerareoplane bringing
River out of its remoteness. Oneeao f
the old pioneers scorned the su
disconcertingnews came to Seabur
when he was in the middle of
speech, which he cut short in order
to rush for a train headed toward
Roosevelt's home et Sagamore
It is believed that the ensuing inter-
Y
a
Hill,
a luncheon club in Chicago about
the time when, because of the World
War,"the minds of men' were turn-
in to the deeper and more import-
g p p ,
ant things of life," according to the
script furnished us by Mr, Tommy
Munns, in which we place full ere-
Barrels- esee 15,4
Packing and storing 72 2.4
Taxes 203 6.9
All other current ex-
penses , .. , , , , , , , 428 14,5
---
Total 2,950 100A
tion of real hardships for settlers
to eThe "They've ,
haven't
view was one of the most unpleasant
experiences of Roosevelt's career,
and
dente. The leading spirit in this
luncheon club was Mr, Melvin Jones,better
SUNDAY AFTERNOON
(,By Isabel Hamilton, Goderich, Ont,)
(By how tenderly He Gareth
TellY
For the weary and oppressed,
How their burdens all He oppressed,
h,
As He leads them to His rest,
Tell that He, the Lord from Heaven,
•hold
Died for all and lives a aI
g
All through Him may be forgiven,
All with Him in Tory Tei
g reign.
Robert Murray.
�al'R4YER
God of our fathers, whose mercies
have not failed us in any time of
need, accept now the tributes of our
p
hearts'thanksgiving for Thy guard-
fan care and love. Amen.
Selected.
S. S. LESSON FOR AUGUST 2nd,
Lesson' Topic—Philip's Missionary
Labors
Lesson Passage—Acts 3:26-40.
Golden Text—Acts 8:4.
Philipthe Evangelist was one of
the seen chosen to attend to the
secular concerns of the primitive Jer-
usalem church. After the persecution
which scattered them abroad he went
Yo the city of Samaria where he
preached and did miracles so that the
j people said, "This is the great
of God." While there an "angel power
(the Lord spoke unto Philip, saying:
Arise, and go towards the south unto
;the way that goeth down from Jer-
usalem unto Gaza, which is desert,"
The command was definite so it could
hebut
1p behave sunwo dared rstood at being told
ghonorable
to leave a lace where his work was
evidently most successful and to o
g
to a desertplace where there couldn't
be the same tunity of preaching
and healing,
Philip may have questioned but he
"Arose and went. He in Gods time
carne to know the wherefore of his
-da Y• Y got a car,
they? There's a good road to o
g g on,
isn't there? There's tractors and
trucks; maybe all haven't got em,
but neighbors have, There's •a rail-
way a little piece, a few miles away.
There's a telegraph. There is often
f a radio. When I came out to settle
there just wasn't an road. M wife
Y y
and I had an ox Cant and our house -wealth
stuff. We ate bannacks and wild
berries. We made the road as we
came aloe We built our to
g g cabin
ourselves, To get money on which to
live 1 fres hted for the first ear and
g y
was often away- from home for weeks.
Then I stumped my land by main
force, made a wooden plough
ploughed ip" While this
oxen and I;ee
is true, to some extent, of the older`
sections, in other parts the people
must yet make all the improvements.•�
oseOne
fa mars and business omen prosperousme ren n
centi've to others just beginning, in
this great land of promise, to make
speite ofst of hardshtheir opportunities in
difficulties. The
contrary to all custom and precedent
he did very little of the talking,
bury polled a teat vote maim from
g Y
independent sources, for Tammany,
according to its habit, knifed him
New York City,'and he would prob-
ably have been elected but for Roost
veli s action.. Disillusioned, Seabury
retired into private life. A man
and cultivated mind his leisure
did not rest heavily upon him.
tr'a elled and collected books and read
and wrote, and it Seemed that he
made his Instpublic appearance.
a cable to London announcing
new task that was imposed upon
P P
brought him hurrying home.
Seabury comes of an oid
American family remem-
'bar, which ranlas high •in the ecc
astical history of the United States.
of his ancestors was the
Anglican bishop on this continent
and a staunch Tor His father.
y'
grandfather and great-grandfather
were Episcopalian clex ymen
g
Samuel was at first intended for
Sea-
in
of
He
had
But
the
him
•
and
s-
first
andago
the
at present secretary-general of Lion-
Lion -
ism, He knew that there were pun-
deeds or thousands of such luncheon
clubs scattered throughout the Unit-
ed States, and he felt that if they
would unite theymight be able to
g
perform much more important work
than they could do as scattered
units. So he sent letters to all
luncheon clubs he could hear of
which were not otherwise affiliated
in other words 'to luncheon clubs
which were not made upof Shriners;
Knights of .Columbus, Elks, Ro-
tarians, Kiwanians and what not.
For three years correspondence rag-,
ed and at the end of that time the
Lions Club came formally into ex-
istence.
The first club to use this name
was that rof San Antonio Texas,
That was in 1915. The international
association entered upon the scene
two years later. In the past fiveY'
'years there has been an average of abroken-hearted
y present
bership bis a estimated e at90,000 with
+
OLD-FASHIONED BALL FAN HAS
QUIT THE PASTIbIE
Some of our rather morbid friends
who still go to the ball games tell u,
that the old-time rooter has •diaap-
Peered. They do not refer specifical-
ly to a man named Palmer whose
roars were a feature of the local
game in earlier days, but to the real
rootingvied his
type of fan who seri
name from the noun fanatic. If he
roots to -day he roots decorously, not
to y fai'ntly', exce t the odd s ec-
sa p •
•rotor who desires to attract attention
t
to himself for political purposed, He
is somewhat ashamed of unbridled
emotions. If he criticizes the umpire
it is in modulated accents. Yf he up-
braids the opposing teams'it is in
language denuded of ferocity. He is
no lou 'er delirious def victor nor
with defeat, Years
one returningfrom the Island.
and knowing not word of the Eng-
clumuc��m
.wr-u
il�,01i
L�°��J��„y�r�`/�%%/�
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Ace
f
wa
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Instanthold
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Admir��yhomes
ation
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mission. A man great in his own
country, being steward to the house-
of Caudate, queen of the Ethiop-
fans, was on the road returningfrom
Jerusalem where he had been to won-
hip—a long, long journey but for
' y
him a most eventful one. Not many
mighty, not many noble are called.
b
but some are and this man was one
of them.
Philip and the eunuch are brought
together into a close conversation and
now Ptah shall know the meaning
p g
of his being sent into a desert, for
there he meets with a chariot, thatt
shall serve for a synagogue, and one
man, the conversion of whom shall be
and
people feel that the time is past when
they should be satisfied with make-
s lift buildings for worship. Better
better roads better oris es
g ,
better equipment, better farms, better
gardens are being developed, and
therefore they desire that suitable
churches be built, Wherever ossible
P
these are beingerected and
quite of-
ten the minister does his share in
carpentering and painting. There
are many demands on his time and in
y
these xeat stretches of county lou
g y' g
drives are unavoidable. One da ten
f y'mi told,
ones tutheif neral •sle hom is ome, he dol the
Russian child. nal
day drives
•church. He would have been
acquisition for he is a man of mag-
nificent and dignified appearance
well as of exemplary
p Y probity.
was taught at'home by his father
man of sound culture. While Sam-
uel was at law school he wrote
book on corporation' law which
P
accepted as a text book before
graduated. Hepractised politics
almost as early 'as he practised
and one of his first campaigns
fou ht for 'Henry George, the single
g g
taxer who ran for mayor of
.
York. In 1901 when he was 28 years
oes he was elected a justice of
city court. One of his first acts
an
as
H9
a
a
was
he
law,
was
g
New
the
was
2,500 clubs scattered through the
United States, Canada, Cuba, Mexico,
China and the Hawaiian Islands. We
are glad that there is none in Italy,
so that the organization is in no
danger of being involved in the con-
trovers between the Pope and Mus-
y principles of the club are
solini. The p
thus set forth:—
Lionism promotes the principles
of good citizenshi
« p'
Lionism takes an active interest
in the civic, commercial, social and
moral welfare of the community.
"Lionism units its members in the
bonds of friendship and mutual
understanding.
.coo language nor of baseball slang,
could tell from the demeanor of the
crowd whether the home team won
or lost. There was a perceptible at-
mosphere of depression, even of
gloom, not wholly by the pangs
of unrequitted appetite due to a post-
gonad dinner,
This change is not peculiar to Tor-
onto but we gather from American
authorities that it is more or less
common wherever professional base-
ball is played and the larger the city
the more marked it is. The old-time
baseball fan has disappeared. In earl-
'zee years he used to sit almost invar-
iaorebly in the bleachers, and we have
•caused
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the
exquisitely
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fQORIENTIA"
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stand
internationally
2000
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ANNUAL
WORLD
seeing
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Canadian National
uge, costly,
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earth
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shore.
Paved highways
p
many beautiful
hundreds
Throughout
of the fifty-third
Exhibition
displays, sport
music and
and
Make Canadiann
g the
Au
,Aug.Sept.Canadian
aboutspecial
boat train
describing
Reservations
the Eastern
pageant;
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Coliseum.
GRANDSTAND
Box seats $1.50
EXHIBITION
CHORUS
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and
and a
Over
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of engaging
the entire
Canadian
there will
afloat and
performancesof
diversity.
your National
National
28 to Se
reduced
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this ear's
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World—nightly
also for
famous
CHORUS
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8
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accepted
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EXHIBITION'
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or
29th;
and
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r
buildings
the
gems
-acre
about
attractions.
National
be
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literature
4 concerts
6 chairs
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7Sc;
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to the
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features ,
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travel
rates b
fir
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Thuya,,
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Brisk and cheerful. She always
keeps her mouth feels fresh, she frs1. She use she
WRIGLEY'S her mouthfresh.
awing Gum re-
fleshes the mouth and removes all
trace of eating and smoking.
WRIGLEY'S after
every meal -the mark / InnaEyt
refinement, �l•
efficiency. 4S • 1,t
���
AVti RIGLEY8
@.•�4j
cls°
/! +`•, �' o
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in effect, for aught he knows, the con- next
version of a whole nation. thirty-five miles in another direction
versitilPhilinofe a by is ordered the Spirit whan is whispering pltoc aresick, rm t lonely oee ceremony.
this and
to hi•m, "Go near, and join thyself to he has many calls to make in bring-
this chariot," ing comfort and cheer, The young pec-
pie, boys' clubs and girls clubs need
The eunuch was reading aloud, pos-
sibly those portions which he had has leadership. Committee •meetings
must be held here and there to help
heard read and expounded at Jerusa-
tem, that he might recollect the bet- his groups of lead, ars at the half -doe-
ter what he had heard there. en or more appointments on his
Philo' recognized the charge. Educational work is needed
Philip g portion the
eunuch was reading and he, without and lectures, illustrated with lantern
slides take u other But
further introduction, spoke to the • g y evenings.j y
eunuch saying: standest thou it is all done gladly and with a a of
"Un service in helping -these people to be
to remove city clerks who had
charged with stealing jury fees.
his cA hambers prominentpolitician
rr hurriete d
rim and explain that such things
were not done by young judges.
bury ordered him to leave, thus sere-
ing notice, which has remained
force ever since, that he was not
be regarded as a servant 'by any
tical boss .or clique. He has continued
to rule his court with dignity
firmness. One day District Attorney
Jerome, then at the height of
fame, appeared before Searbur
been
to
th
Sea-
in
toof
poli-
and
, his
to
"Lionism is designed to further
al ws,lvic
opportunities, sarge upport support socialand
di-
re'ct public councils, and in every way
make the lives of men better and hap-
pier."
P
We admit that a lot of this is
meaningless to us and to most of
what we do understand we are un-
alterably opposed. But we are free
to confess that the Lions' organize-
gy
tion has done a lot of good work
which but for it probablyitnever
would have been done. With special
good will we can the work it
more than once d the erroneous
guess put forward that the name fan
5tself came
large • number into
ofuse
spectators in the
bleachers who would bring fans to
the game as a protection against the
g
heat. The true fan of that era would
seat himself as near as possible to an
'outfielder, and often he was armed
,
with a peablower which would come
into action when the opposing fielder
was about to catch a ball. Man an
error and a lost game are to be listed
as amenOntario's
g the triumphs of the old-
time fan. The less enterprising would
their feelings
INEXPENSIVE
SATISFYING
what thou zea: He wanted to
be of use to this man and was not re- Christian Canadian citizens
but rather invited to with " •
prosecute a lawyer. Accustomed
dominate courts Jerome spoke
to
to
praise
is doing for the blind, and for the
preservation of noennal eyesight
relieve and assist the
home team by shouting insults at
the 'opposition, This constant flow
pulsed sit
among children. It has specialized
of picturesque epithet bad its effect
SITS IN JUDGMENT ON OTHER
in this field and has raised manyin
wearingout the
•
thousands of dollar for those af-
patience of many
an outfielder, leaving •him prone to
• JUDGES
1111
flitted with loss of sight or failing
vision. Free eye clinics have been
error and blasphemies,
Behind third •base was another
•'Perhaps the most -discussed citizen
ee-=-y -=
set up. Poor children with defective
favorite
in New York at the present time is
Judge Samuel
it r�- '
aprovided
eyesight have been with
roost for the fans, as it is
for other students of the game who
Seabury. It is he who
is behind these scattered announce
meets that find their way into the
y
_
-
—
!_
' ; _eeee
'
lasses. A
g magazineprinted in
Braille characters is, circulated. Rad-
los have been supplied to blind people.
Pp p P
believe it is the best strategic posi-
tion from which to grasp the sorry
scheme of things entire and vocally
press to the effect that a
certain magistrate has been dismiss-
'"--t
, .1.-- =
A novel idea upon which the organize-
tion is now working is to provide the
remould it nearer to the heart's de-
sire. Wherever he established him-
ed ora certain lawyer disbarred. For
Delightful for With
-
blind with white walking sticks, which
self he got his chief fun by
oven -fresh. any meal. it is on the report of Judge Seabury,
=
will be to the
shouting
in his present role of inquisitor, that
a flavor and crispness imitations never such actions are taken, He is the
P
man, suddenly recalled from Europe
Wise buyers and obscurity after a brilliant career
tit-
l '111
ek_, ti
a notification general
public and command a right of way,
This is the kind of clean cut and specs-
fie (benevolence which everybody can
approval or disapprobation at players
and umpires, and in ribald repartee
with the boys who sold pop and pea-
nuts and rented seat cushions. The
equal.
genuine
the
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y
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make sure of getting
on the bench and in polities, who is
tP
Corn Flakes byplacingtying to purge New York of its dis•
b"g' , honest magistrates and the politicalIn
S grafters 'who invade the temple of
s on the grocery justice. He is making a pretty fair
job of it, too, and is enjoying himself
more than he has done for years.
There are those who believe that as
he works be hears the faint int'oxicat-
ing murmur of the bee which hums
"Albany" to him, or even "Washing -utiles
�+
ton. It has been suggested that he
gg
might win the Democratic nomination
for the governorship should Roose-
vett step out to run against Hoover;
or even that circumstances might a-
which would make him even auw„E
doughtier Opponent of the President
than Roosevelt.
; , Theta eau be a no doubt that either
„, ! N a -hese nominations would. find
1 (Seabury in a mood of enthttsli-
- antic acceptance, ll'e is r4 big man
'JI and lie 'ktiiivs it but he fe' is that14
... �' , , ....
never yeti ' has he had the tip ,o�rtuti.
"', ,:
�►.'►►►' ' Or o> ftp a ilii ,ing the public the true
extent of ; s moral and ihtgllectual
�'i r; ,, ,» , ; afaid'� �� +p!�bEltlt��ltirt�+is ,�y,� �yr�y y @
,� f . ,, :.N e,/t 1 , :;. r ..;,. '' '. :. $tat �6 SA ' i Wc{ i� 41<',i � g dt
a ............:: .. @.,. u:.L r, . /. ,, ' :: .. .c .. ,. .. ........ ...._.
Menr or
happy life
is a university_training.
to attend
standing,
their degrees
receivespersonal
More than
go
ness rewards
ing end
For information
�'
LONDON
� ..
know
a University
where
and
half
int,
high character.
•.
f.:.A1dili�A
.:: •.:
....
living
that
students
,where
attention?
the
business
ability,
tY
write
,
a
the
university
thorough
.
-I•
.�
full,rich
first
Why
of the
work
each
because
,.
say
'�`
"
essential
not
highest
student
grad-
g train-
0
and
plan
for
busi-
el
Nrime
"
•
■�
understand and approve. It is a good
deal better, in our opinion than med-
tiling with the morals of a community,
Toronto, of course, the Lions
are famous for their activities in be-
hall of youngsters. The boxing shows
have become an institution. Busy
men have been induced to make a
hobby of helping underprivileged
youth instead of taking to - golf or
bridge, and incidentally have found a
road to their own happiness for
which the had vainly
Y groped. By
learning to help others they have
helped themselves, and since so
many people need the support and
communicated enthusiasts of others
before they are willing to make these
benevolent and ublicee 'cited mo-
tions, clubs like the Lions are not
only a benefit but a necessity in our
of the
ern oelety. The hat the mein-
organisation suggests that
bars desire to emulate the courage
�of the Zinn, and they Maid in special
reverence such fanietts lions as the
�1..
Lion of 'V'enice the Lion of Lucerile ►
the Lion of 'Waterloo, and the Li
� dr!
,p +fir ,yp yrf� which /y♦,,,�4-
�,4 U't�43Wh� NJJ 'title WIl'Lslt,i. �4ir,�fi
public opinion which affected him
was that expressed byhis neighbors,
g
and this was generally approving. He
was encouraged to shout and jeer,
and nobody ever told him there was
anything uncouth an his behavior.,
But the war brought about an awak-
g
ening. Following the armistice there
came an increased' interest in amuse-
amuse-
ments and eport generally. Attend-
;anae records were shattered at nearly
all ,baseball parks, but the crowds
were somewhat different from the for-
mer crowds.
These people belong to all classes
of society from the newly made mil-
Bonaire to the college student, Many
of them were seeing'baseball for the
first time or fon thfirst time Meer
an internal of than a
manners were somewhat different
from those of the old-fashioned fan
olid their numbers were so great that
they trete in the ma crit . The
J y y want-
ed rather to be amused than to see
the home team win. Their ouanc-
on the sportwas
p, Erle from the anal-
ant traditions of which Muggay 'Me-
,�'•� q qb J... ,v..
gritty / �!t •'SL 9tAt'S11'i',lA d>Q•6fNf�t•Rq"s rP�'%u„w..