Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Daily Times, 7 May 1932, p. 8

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

PAGE EIGHT THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, SATURDAY, MAY'7, 1932 EE es coe aman [EASTERN ONTARIO NEWS | To Inspect Cadets Cornwall, -- Announcement has been made that the Highland Cadet Corns of Cornwall Collegiate In- stitute. will be inspected on _the 'afternoon of May 17 by Capt. J. A. Isbester, Kingston. The Public School corps will parade for in- spection in the morning of the same day. Paid Official Visit Kingston.--The Lord Bishop of Ontario, Rt. Rev. John Lyons D.D.. made his first official visit to the Parish of St. John's, Portsmouth, last Sunday evening. His Lordship was greeted by a large congrega- tion, which filled the church. The confirmation class was presented by the rector, Rev. A. E. Smart, and the service was most inspiring. ea -- Fell Under Train Alexandria. ---- Having appar- ently fallen off a freight train here Alexander Cameron, Stellar- ton, N.S., was instantly killed. He appeared to be about 40 years of age. The above address was found on papers in his pocket and also that he was a member of the British Empire Service League of that place. He was formerly a member of the 181st Battalion. A. E. Tiers Elected Fenelon Falls,--The election at Fenelon Falls on Monday, May 2nd, to fill the office of reeve for the balance of the year 1932, re- sulted in a majority of 24 for A. E. Tiers over ex-Reeve Ioster Kelly, and a victory for the anti- Continuation School group over the Municipal Council and School Board, Residences Entered Port Hope.--Five residences in the Ontario Street section were visited by burglars, early this week, but after check-ups bad been made, it was revealed that only. a small quantity of loot was taken. The local police are investigating. Prisoners Removed Belleville, -- Constable Alfred Hodgson of the Lindsay police, arrived in Belleville and took Al- fred Bostock and Violet Graham back to their home town of Lind- say, where Bostock will face a charge of theft from the Elsmure Hotel, where he was employed previous to his arrest in Belle- ville. Art Group Met Kingston.--The Art Group of the Kingston Art and Music Club was held on Monday with Dr, A, B. Klugh presiding. br. R. G. Trotter wag elected convener and Miss Annie Gibson was elected secretary-treasurer, An executive committee consistign of Miss Car- son, Mrs, P. 8. Mahood and Dr. A. B, Klugh was also named. PRODUCE PRICES TORONTO PRODUCE » « (Buying) Toronto dealers are buyif duce at the following prices Eggs--Ungraded, cases fresh extras, l4c; fresh firsts, 12¢; seconds, 10 to llc. Butter--No. solids, 19%c; No. 2, 18)c. Churning cream--=>Special, 2lc; 1, 20c; No. 2,.17¢c, rob. shipping points, ar NO 1 Ontario creamery | "14 to Cheese--No. 1 large, colored, par- | 25¢ 8c; Butter--No. 1 creamery, prints, 24c: No. 2 creamery, prints, 23c. Cheese--New, large, 12¢; 14%¢. Old, large. 18¢; triplets, 18Y4c; stiltons, 20%zc. Poultry Broilers, 35 to 40c: ickens, 5 to 6 Ibs, 25¢c 1h.; 4 to 5 2c: 3 to 4 lbs, 20c. under 22 firsts, 16c; seconds, 14 to 15e. { : twins, | returned, | 12%c¢; triplets, 12'%c; new stiltons, | twins, 18/4c; | Hens, over 5 Ibs, 20 to 23c; | 5 ths, 22c. Ducklings, 22 to Geese, 15 to 18¢c. Turkeys, 23 affined and government graded, 10- |to 25C. Yc. Dressed Poultry-- Alive A B Spring boilers over 1): | +] HER ives Chickens over 5 lbs, ca, | under 5 tbs, cach .... 1 Fatted hens, over 5 Ibs, each Over 4 to 5 Ibs, each 11 Over 3 to 4 ths, each 07 Young turkeys 8 to 12 Ibs... Ducklings, over 5 Ibs, Voene 17 each 14 Over 4 to § 213 Old roosters, over 5 lbs. each Guinea fowl, over 2 lbs. 16 14 15 14 10 20 10 Toronto dealers are offering pro- duce to retail dealers at the follow- ing prices: Eggs -- Fresh extras, in cartons, 20c; fresh extras, loose, 18c; firsts, | | | .. | Butter, FARMERS' MARKET The following are quotations, re- tail, in effsct on the St. Lawrence | Market, Toronto: Produce-- Eggs, cxtras, doz Do., firsts, doz. .. dairy, 1b. Do., creamery, 1b. .... Fruits and Vegetables-- Apples, bus Bananas, doz : Cranberries, qt. . Grapes, 1 1b, Oranges, doz. Lemons, doz. . Pineapples, each . Strawberries, pt. ..ihee. Asparagus, 2 Ibs, . Jeans, green, qt. .. Brussels sprouts, qt. +... Cauliflower, doz. . Celery, head .... Chicory, head 0.22 0.18 0.35 2.50 0.23 0.25 0.25 0.25 0.35 0.60 0.25 040 3.50 0.25 0.20 0.30 | | | 0.25 | 0.50 | 1} Cucumbers, each o..ove Cress, 3 bunches .. Cabbage, doz. ... Carrots, basket .......« Do., new, 3 bunches .. Green peppers, each .... Eggplant, each ......... Herbs, bunch Lettuce, head ..... Mushrooms, 1b, ..... Potatoes, basket .. Do., new, 3 Ibs. , Onions, basket .., Par. 'ps, bag Radishes, bunch ..... Rhubarb, 4 bunches Squash, each .......... Tomatoes, 1b, , There are 18,000 civic employees in Detroit who have not been paid since April 1. They have had what Let's Pay Tribute . . . "May your lif¢'s' best days be dawning, And the tribute that I pay, Be my loving wish forever For a happy Mothers' Day." The one day in the year yor can pour out all your love and affection upon the ilearest and sweetest little woman in the world-- YOUR MOTHER. No mat- ter where mother lives, on sunday, May 8th, she'll be waiting there patiently for a token from you. Here are the shops of a hundred different Mothers' Day Gifts ny Zevora Canty. S0c Special Mothers' Day Boxes 15¢, $1.00, $1.50 Stationery 50 up Cc Perfume Photo Albums .. 75¢ up Don't disappoint your mother -- we'll pack and mail any gift to anywhere for you. When in need of Drugs "QUICKLY" 'Phone THE REXALL STORES Jury & Lovell | King E. Simcoe S. Phone 28 Phone 68 fr TR | Professor | even they call payless pay-days--~--ptrat- ford Beacon-Herald, Tyrone News (Continued from page 2 Cullough's, Mrs. J. Henry, Burketon, spent Sunday with her neice Mrs, F, L, Byam, Rev. and Mrs Wootton Picton, recently visited their son, Rev, A M. Wootton. The sympathy of the community is extended to Miss I. M, Cole, and miss Oda Cole and Mr. Blake Cole, Bethesda, and Mr, James Cole, Bowmanville, in the death of their brother, Mr. John R. Cole who passed away in Bowmanville hgs pital. Quite a number from here attended the tuneral which was held from his late residence at Bethesda to Brooklin Cemetery, The C.G.LT. and the Tuxis Boys are holding a special church servige on Sunday, May 15th, at 10.30 a.m. Special speakers will be present, Tyrone Sunday School anniver- sary will be held on May 22nd, Special music by the school, CANADIAN ATHLETE KNOWN IN SUDAN Montreal, have their fans even in the remote parts of Africa it a short time ago by Edward G, Cook, brother of Myrtle A. Cook, a former Olympic champion and now of the sports staff of the t cal Star. In a native mud and straw hut at Tula Wange, Northern Nigeria, he found tacked to the wall a newspaper clippi along with the picture of Peggy Math of To ronto to whom Miss Cool Al ted as coach. The artic bore the caption * fillin: Myrtle Co written by Miss ( she lert' Toronto duties her Mr. with explained 1 and another white neople ar natives in that not discover " « eline'y ure to he a tre little hut k to Cook the Su a lett man wer session in the LEACOCK GIVES FACTIONS ADVICE fontreal . Annual con Stephe sity few weeks | to dissuade ther Ye ill have th w | vain for the ripe NDOSE 11s counsel strong 4mpulse here a few peal may consciention than .i "The ter to stay on and comfort « go out into tl the world vision of the roseate nest unknown future." the R SWONOLR" "ov, ee 25) CTT ~- Canadian athletes | discovered | Mon- | ch | Services in the City Churches Minister REV. E. HARSTON, LL.B. "The House of Friendship" F" Simcoe St, United Church % REGINALD G, GEEN, L.T.CM., Organist and Choir Master Assistant REV. J. 8, I. WILSON, B.A, B.D, i. "THE MOTHERHOOD OF GOD" 3 P.M.--SUNDAY SCHOOL. "MAGNIFICENT IN SIN" The Minister Will Preach at Both Services A Hearty Welcome to All A Rev, Chas. E, Leonard Richer, L.R. King Street United Church | ; Musical Director, 11 a.m.--MOTHERS' DAY SERVICE. 2.30 p.m.--SPECIAL PAGEANT BY SUNDAY SCHOOL 7 p.m.--PUBLIC WORSHIP. The Minister at Both Services oA | FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Special Evangelistic Services -- CONDUCTED BY -- REV. DAVID F. NYGREN SUNDAY, MAY 8th 11 a.m.--*"GOD'S BLUEPRINT." 3 p.m.--MOTHERS' DAY SERVICE 7 p.m.--"THE GOSPEL ACCORDING TO MOTHER" WEEK NIGHT SERVICES (Except Saturday) 8 P.M. Holy Trinity Church ANGLICAN Corner of Court and Barrie REV. 8. C. JARRETT, Incumbent, 30 Fairbanks St. Organist, Mr. Walter Jackson. MOTHERS' DAY 8 a.m.-- Celebration of Holy Communion. 11 a.m. -- Choral Euch- | arist. 3 p.m. -- Sunday School. | 7 p.m. -- Evensong and Sermon. 'St. Georges ANGLICAN Cor. Bagot and Centre Sts. M. CANON C. dePPENCIER, M.A. Organist and Choirmaster, Matthew Gouldburn, A.L.CM. 8 a.m~--Holy Communion. 11 am~--Morning Prayer. The will Sing: "God So the World" Choir Loved 2.30 p.m.~--Sunday School. 7 p-m.~KEvensong. The Choir will Sing: "And the Glory of the Lord" Thurs, May 12 at 8 pm, Confirmation by Bishop Lyons, of Kingston. Baptisims Second Sunday cach Month at 4 p.m. roy gpm py | GRACE Lutheran Church 150 ALBERT ST. ev, A. C. Hahn SUNDAY, MAY 8th, 10 am. Sunday School 11 a.m, . Morning Worship 7 pm. es Evening Worship CHRISTADELPHIAN "THE SON OF MAN SHALL COME IN THE GLORY OF HIS FATHER with his angels, and then he shall reward every man according to his works." Heaven or hell going at death unsecriptural. "The dead know not anything." Resurrec. tion of the body the true hope. Read: Matthew 16:27; Acts 24:14:15; Psalm 146: 1-4; Isaiah 38-17-19; Job 19:25-27, Special Meetings at tho LITTLE BROWN CHURCH 47 Gibbon St. MAY 10, 11, 12, Services 8 and 8 pam. each day Nev, ¥, A. Daw, Evangelist. All Welcome A colored man came running down the lane as if a wild animal were after him, "What are you running for, Mose ? called the Colonel trom the arn. back Mose, "I ain't a-runnin' {0 shouted "I's a-runpin' from!" Sunday School | St. Andrew's United Church Cor. of Pruce St, and Simcoe £t., 8. Mr. George Henley, Organist, Church, Bowmanville, of Mr, Francis Sutton, MOTHERS' DAY SERVICES 11 am. ~"Mother and the Home." # p.m.--Special Mothers' Day Service in the Sabbath School. Speaker--Rev, Geo, McQuade, 7 p-m~Special Song Service by the choir of Trinity United Forty | REV. F. J. MAXWELL, Minister | | voices under the leadership Services | A QUESTION OF IDEALS The International Sunday | School Lesson for May Sth: "Esau | Sells His Birthright"--Genesis 25:27 74, Golden Text: 1 Corinth- ia 30. This story of Jacob and Esau and the selling of the birthright is a very familiar story indeed and we have all pretty well made up our minds what we think of it | long ago. While Esau was a poor stupid fool to do as he did, we fnstinctively think about as high- | do of his bro- | him as we ther, who took advantage weakness In the meanest moet cowardly fashion to rob him of what seemed to be his of right. Certainly it is difficult to give either one much credit for the part he played in the incid- ent of our story. But we mustn't forget moral standards do change with the years, and what might have been considered quite defensible, or even altogether worthy, a few thousand years ago, might be looked on somewhat differently to-day. There is no doubt abose it, as this story was first told those many, many centuries ago, and as it was repeated over and over again, it was fully intended that Jacob should be thought of as the hero of it. This is a Fie- brew story, told to Hebrew peo- ple, and Jacob was one of the fa- thers of their race, while Esau was thought of only as the head of a related Semitic people, but not in the direct line of the one true nation chisen of Jehovah, So what we have here .in our lesson for to-day is a great hero tale passing down from genera- tion to generation and passing current among the people, who had come to think af the thing that Jacob is represented as do- ing as not only quite pardonable but even as quite praise-worthy. As we see it to-day Jacob cheated and overreached his ' brother most ghamefully, but the old He- brew who told that story of his doings intended to compliment him; because, did not rather doubtful conduct work out to the fulfilment of Jehovah's purpose and make a way for the success and prosperity that came to Ja- cob's posterity in the later years? Of course if we believe that we will have to say that these early Hebrews had about come to the place where they worshipped the God of success, and that they were about ready to overlook and forgive meanness and overreach- ing so long as it could be made to appear pious and justified be- cause of some end that it attain- ed. And that would scem to be a rather cruel thing to say about any people. Of course we might be ready to say that that fitted in rather well with the ideas that we had of the Jewish people, even as we know them to-day. But we mustn't be too ready to think or to say those things. Come to think of it, were the He- brews the first or the last people thus guilty of making a god of success? And talking about hero stories, how many of the stories have we in our own literature, prepared specially for young peo- ple, that lay all the emphasis up- on success? The fact that men have won out and made their millions and come to places of power and authority in the world has been considered quite enough to justify the rehearsing of the story of their lives and the hold- ing up of them as examples for all young men to follow, And perhaps their pathway to success was marked by meanness and averreaching that would throw this deed of Jacob's quite into the shade, It is just a question if any people that the world has known have more faithfully wor- shipped the god of success than have the Anglo-Saxon people. We have been criticizing Ja- coh's actions and spirit, but can we find much to say in favor of Esau's? Jacob's greed and over- reaching were deplorable, but were not Esau's weakness and self-indulgence equally so? There was at least a certain worldly ly of of his that wisdom in Jagob's conduct, but and | Calvary Baptist Church Corner Centre and John Streets PAUL B. W. GELATT Pastor 9.45 a.m. -- Men's Bible Class, a.m, tev, John Gaphany, Halstead Penn, will preach, 3 p.m.--Sunday School "A Complex Char- '. The Pastor will preach, Monday, 8 p.m. -- Young People's Mceting. Wed, 8 pm. -- Prayer Meeting. Fri. 8 p.m.--~--Choir Practice Unity Truth Centre Services Sunday 11 In Genosha Hotel All Are at am, Welcome Presbyterian Church Simcoe Street North and Brock Street REV. DUNCAN MUNRO 34 Brock St. Wy Phone 2554 11 a.m. = Mothers' Day Address, 3 p.m. -- Special Mothers' Day Service, Open Session Everybody Welcome. 7 pm.--Public Worship The Minister at both sérvices, Everybody welcome. | |] | Esau's hardly had anything ae) worthy as that to commend it. We may feel sorry for him but | we know all the while that there | couldn't posgibly be a world made | in which such conduct and spirit | as he conld work anything else but disappointment and dis aster Self-contrel and respect for law fundamental 'thing and the one who scorns them | will always have to pay the | price. WORLD FAMOUS CHURCHES ABROAD through of Ireland, you It lies, 134 miles from Dublin, amidst -a stretth of beautiful glades and valleys. Benbo, a small mountain, looks down upon it, al its sum- mit a erystal lake which never has been exhausted, A meadow river runs from the place where, a mile away, is Lough Gill, one of the lakes of Killarney, famed in many a poem. S It is in this ancient spot that one comes upon the Church of St, John and the Dominican abbey which stands with it, The abbey according to the records of the place, was erected in 1252: and the church antedates it. But the structure fell into ruins. Fifty years ago it was rebuilt and now, an edifice with distinct Romanes- que influence in every line, it serves to house a congregation of the Church of Ireland. In its graveyards are tombs and graves, dating back to antiquity, Interesting as is the church, it i& the Abbey which possesses the greater amount of historical in- terest, Maurice Fitzgerald estab- lished his castle on this spot in the thirteenth century, and from this beginning came the Monas- tery of the Holy Cross, For two hundred years, church and abbey stood unmolested, despite the various warring factions and depredations of the lands. Then quite by accident it was de- stroved in a fire. Brian Mac- Donough restored it in 1416, and it remained in all its glory until the reformation. Then it fell into disuse and gradually became what it is today. It of Norman foundation. THere aro eight narrow lancet windows. Part of the cloister still stands, of perhaps the most interesting of all, fifteenth cen- tury design. A low choir looks through a door to the receiving vaults and graveyard without, The ground has been raised by the dust of many buried there. out are As you travel down the lake country come upon Sligo. He: "If we were married, darling, the hours would roll by without our noticing them." She: "Do you mean we probably wouldn't be able to afford a clock?" 1 believe in a fixed dividend pol- icy 'declared long ahead so that the small shareholder may know ag well as the insider what to expect and mot permit the insider to profit at the expense of tae prdinary stock- holder,--Henry L. Doherty, 5 c= =e Christ Church (ANGLICAN) Cor. Hillcroft & Mary Sts. REV. RR. B. PATTERSON, M.A. Incumbent SUNDAY, MAY TH 8 a.m.--Holy Communion for Scouts, Guides and others, 10.a.m.~Senior Sunday School. 11 a.m.--~Morning Prayer and Ser. mon, "A Mother's Devotion." 2.30 p.m.--Sunday School, 7 p.m.--~Evening Prayer and Ser- mon, "The Passing of Moses." Rev. J. D. Paterson, of Peterboro, will preach next Sunday, May 15th, instead of Sunday, May 22nd. om + -- otic EE NORTHMINSTER UNITED CHURCH Rev. A. Mansell Irwin, B.A, B.D. 11 a.m.--*"Mother's Day." 7 p.m.--Evening Worshi Rev. Rossington Hare at both services. P. will preach ALBERT STREET | UNITED CHURCH | Rev. 8. C. Moore B.A, B.D. Re- i | 11 am.--""A Mothers' ward." | 2.30 p.m. -- 8.8. Mothers' Day program. Men's Brotherhood, speaker, Rev, Colin G. Young D.D,, of Toronto. pm, -- Rev. Colin Young, D.D. body V G. me. i Christian Science First. Church of Christ, Scientist 64 Colborne Strect East Morning Service at 11 a.m. SUNDAY, MAY 8th, SUBJECT "ADAM AND 'FALLEN MAN" 1210 P.M, Sunday School Including testimonies of Heale ing through Christian Science. You are cordially invited to attend the services and to make use of the Free Public Reading Room where the Bible and authorized Christian Science literature may be read, borrowed or purchased, Open on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays from 2 to § p.m. Tax reform like charity begins at home. First, the city, then the province and lastly the Dominion, Local taxes are most important.- Sault Daily Star, --

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy