Halton Hills Newspapers

Georgetown Herald (Georgetown, ON), June 8, 1938, p. 6

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page 6 the georgetown heram wed neaday evening june 6m 1938 4 as a man thinketh br amuu1e c btnme8 it was after nine oclock in the morning wheu doris wilson awoke and began arranging her memories of last night and her im pressions regarding what today was to bring forth to begin with she had had a sharp quarrel with stan bout the cjjr just because she wanted it especially today to go to that tea at the country club he must have business that demand ed it that meant she would have to go n the trolley bo plebeian she who had been a beautyparlor girl before stan had made her mistress 0f his fiveroom fiat with all mod ern improvements i homd old flat she hated itl al ready the furniture was out of style and stan wouldnt buy new he wouldnt let her have in a woman frut one day a week either nor let bct send anything but the oat pieces to the laundry there were clothe an thtt act tubs this minute that had wen there a we and stan hateful mm could be because be couldnt find at clean handkerchief well shed have to sonde out a few she sup- oa to shut his yawpl she rose and donned a soiled pink ihmn and pink slippers and drew boudoir cap over her frowsy bob stan bad got his own break fast and the dirty dishes were spread on the set tuba of course w had taken the last egg there was nothing left but stale bread and coffee and cornflakes for herl she threw fresh coffee in upon the steeped grounds in the pot and ailed it with water at halfpast eleven she began the interesting process of dressing at 13 30 a rosy curled ilkclad fra grant creature who in popular par lance looked like a million dol lars left the apartment and sought the china restaurant for her first decent food that day s she took in the first afternoon offering of pictures at the elite picture palace and took short short story complete in this issu the trolley for the country club at three she had ordered no dinner and no supplies for next morning four hours before doris woke that morning susie walker on a farm 20 miles away rolled sleepily out of bed and started her regular morning routine with trimly curled hair and in a clean bunga low dress with a practicable apron she prepared breakfast for her hus band and self and put up his din ner for he was working away from borne that day the wash water was hot and sue filled the hand run washing machine while the children were dressing then while fifteen yearold sam fin ished his fathers chores and ten- yearold bertha scrambled eggs and made toast for her brothers and herself twelve year old tommy manfully ran the machine so as to give mother a good start sue bus tled about emptying the machine filling the boiler when required with clothes to boil and putting up three lunches so that when the school bus came by at 8 is the children would be ready after they wre safely off she shut off the stove left the washing to care for itself and with a long coat over her skipped half a mile down the road to mrs brown s house there was a new baby and the nurse had been taken ill and gone home before the mother was able to get about so every day sue ran in and bathed and dressed the baby and made the mother comfortable and advised and oversaw the inex perienced young irl who was do ing the work and helping out it was ten oclock when she got back but the are had kept and more than half the white clothes were boiled off she turned to with a will and by twelve the last stocking flapped on the line lucky i dont have to get din ner today she reflected eating warmed up potatoes and cold meat on a corner of ihe kitchen table the chickens and the old horse had to be fed the dishes washed rooms tidied beds made after this she had to pump all the water in the ink ami heat all she used over the stove she had oil lamps to fill and trim too but she had time for a few minutes rest on the couch be fore the children came from school at 4 15 dishes washed and clothes fold- ad father suggested a family ride fa the flivver leaning back in the car the tired ache seeping out of her limbs the childrens chatter in her ears and fathers brown hand on the wheel sue sighed from a full heart i believe im the lucki est woman in the world a in a restaurant 30 miles away a thunderouslooking young man and a sulkylooking woman werefinish- jng their meal said she to him i wish rd nevay aeeu youl and said he to her i wish to i jou never hadl travel by motor coach and steamer reservations must be made in advance ask rot vow copy or vacation tours- d h vacation service rfmiin tiilmifnj fiii 7tift cmplete infonutkm t w h long phone i gray coach lines brb9 chicks 3jete no writsag no money orders no bother just call or phone 100 bve delivery guaranteed george c brown r r 1 norval ont facing the supreme test of service international uniform banday school lesson jane ttta ism gouxbn te3ct not what i will but what thou wilt mark 13 86 lesson passage mark 14 3246 by the garden fraught with woe whither thou full oft wouldst go by thine agony of prayer in thedoeolauon there by the dire and deep distress of that mystery fathomless lord our tears in mercy see hearken to our litany h montane prayer 32 no one cart possibly know all that oethsemane meant to jesus it is quite beyond our range to under stand tt all we would have to know in full the conviction mood purpose and faith of christ it is humanitys greatest soul facing his most decisive choice the issue was whether to live or die nold true or recant be guided by safety first or duty first many plausible excuses could have been made for compromise his disciples had been urging him to play safe if only he would yield a little and be conventional and not arouse religious prejudice all would yet b well but no he had challenged evil in the re ligious leaders of his day the spirit of god has led him on and he would not now turn back he went into the garden or gethsemane to pray he had long ago discovered that solitude quiet and prayer helped him to reach right decisions he would think things through with god if jesus christ needed to pray constantly need we expect to live at our best without prayer surrender 3336 the wiu of god was the rule of the life of christ he delighted to do gods will in gods will he found his peace in the thinking of jesus god came first and self was far second he had known for some time that to go to jerusalem at the tune of the passover feast would invite danger yet it was only in jerusalem at a nat ional gathering in the temple that his maximum witness could be ade quately made he who lived by love did not welcome conflict yet the spirit of god within continued to say see it through he began to be sore a mazed and very heavy leaving the three most intimate disciples he weni forward and prayed- that the cup might pass from him that the cross might not be necessary he prayed with the utmost reality and earnest ness according to his desire but con cluded nevertheess not what i will but what thou wilt that was the keynote of his life not i but thou human desire must ueld to the will of god een in the son of god th ill be done that is surrender disappointment 37 42 jesus had done his utmost for his dlsctplci he had shared his convic tions and purposes with them and sought to prepare them by telling them that it would be necessarj for him to die in the upper room he had talked frankly with them he had forew amed both peter and judus and he hid bared nis soul to them nt the last supper et after all this when he 1 ad asked them to keep guard while ho prned ihe fell a sleep the spirit was willing but the flesh was weak christ had to make hts final decision with god bemfl of nil human friendship and help how the disciples must hae grieved that he had jiled their lord when lhe as a group might hne been prning for lilm he had asked them to wlfrch and instead he slept and er true follower is conscious of a similar dlsloaltj betravrd 43 4- in his praye in the qarden of oethsemane christ faced death and won his inner victory but why oh why did he have to be betrayed by one of his disciples it was one of his familiar friends who did this one who had listened to him on the hill sides one who had been in danger with him in a boa one who had been with him in the triumphal procession and the upper room the soldiers with their swords and staves doing the bidding of the chief priests and he scribes and elders were to be ex pected but why did judas have to be their leader and not content with pointing out the one whom they wer to make their prisoner he used the semblance of affection in the act of betrayal he went straight to jesus and said master master and kissed him one with whom christ had shared his innermost secrets was the ajpentntf his arrest there was far more to the cross than the nails thirst and spear thrust there was the betrayal by ay disciple there was the judas kiss airated 46 throughout his ministry jesus- had taught peace and nonresistance he had said blessed are the peaceruak- eru he had taught his disciples not to resist evil but to turn thfe other cheek and go the second mile he was to express the great principle that they that take the sword will per ish with the sword he is known as the prince of peace what irony that he should be placed under arrest by soldiers armed with swords and sta ves has the christian church com promised by sanctioning and abetting war a few years ago pacifist activ ity was widespread if another war were to start would the church again sanction the use of force the ques tion is very complex and good men take opposite sides and advance sin cere arguments this much however can be said that jesus himself prac ticed nonresistance he did not resist the soldiers nor did he allow his dis ciples to use force he was willing to die but not to use any other methods than reason and love questions far discussion 1 name some of the outofdoor ex periences of jesus 2 what caused christ s anguish in the garden 3 watch and pray why are both necessary 4 havt- we am temptations similar to that of judas 5 how does the christian church meet persecution today headache after headache now shes free from them a woman writes i would like everyone who suffers from headaches to try kruschen salts before taking kruschen i was seldom free from a headache but since i have been tak ing it regularly i have hardly had a headache for which x am very thank ful i have been taking a small dose of kruschen every morning in a glass of warm water before my breakmst and i feel so weu mrs aei how do you deal with headsnfes do you just take something to dead en the pain without getting rid of the trotihle which causes the pain headaches can generally be traced to a disordered stomach and to the unsuspected retention to the system of stagnating waste material which poison the blood remove these poisons prevent them forming again and y neverh worr any moref rom that cause and thatts just how kruschen salts bring swift and lasting relief from headaches kruschen aids nature to cleanse your body completely of clogging waste matter county museums prom lime to time it has been sug gested that each county should have its museum for housing local treasure for which there would be no room in our great provincial museum the openin b his honour the lieuten ant gov rnor of a museum at perth ontario has brought this matter once more to mind during recent jcars when the b houses in small towns and villages lave been dosed because the older ha died off and the younger people of the family have gravitated to the cities the need for such local museun has increased ten fold we can think or many va liable i things lost to posterity because the inheritors were huddled in a city flat their possession reduced perforce u a minimum priceless documents have ben burned along with spinning wheels and looms furniture examples of the irt of carlv craftsmen have either been broken up or worse fate have gone into the house of some city millionaire their storj unknown the tradition of workmanship which thej i might have kept alive lost to genera lions to come w congratulate perth and the coitntv in which it is situated on the vision and the public spirit that have prompted the creation of i this storehouse of lorm history mun i icipnl world train berths moving ig loos to awed eskimos fab from home on their way to the eucharlstlc congress at quebec three eskimo have arrived in montreal after trav elling more than 1960 miles from chestetfleld inlet the first part of their memorable journey was ordin ary enough just 450 miles on the ice along the shore of hudson bay hunt ing seals to feed the 19 dogs which hauled them when they reached churchill ana boarded the canadian national train they were in a new world never hav ing seen an engine bigger than outboard motor they were overawed by the locomotives which grew bigger and bigger as they neared montreal sleeping cars intrigued them too they slept in moving igloos carried them incredibly fast- dog sleighs over the i miles given his first taste of ice cream in the diner simon seven youngesc member in the party asked why is it cold you can have things hot here can t you when hot tea fol lowed the ice cream the laughed merrily at the weird logic of the white man the oldest of the group is alphonse kellitsierk 35 who believes his name the fat one john ayaioar i strongpusher is 27 and the lath er of simon rev father l du charme cm i accompanied them on the trip which began at the e of april he speaks eskimo alphonse john and simon speak neither eng lish nor french mortgage sale under and by vxktob of the powers of sale contained in a certain mortgage which will be produced at the time of sale there will be ottered for sale by r j kerb anetfoneer at public auction on wednesday the ttnd day of jane u3s at the hour of onethirty o clock in the afternoon standard time at the farm of the late borage p bingham rh no 4 georgetown ontario tha following property namely all and stnotjlar those certain parcels or tracts of land and premises situate lying and being in the town ship of esquestng in the co of halton being composed of first part of the north easterly half of lot 17 ooncessiarr 10 containing 63 acres more or less secondly all that part of the easterly half of lot 10 concession 10 north of the roadway oithe gandtruflxrauwsy com pany containing a acres more or less and thirdly rart of the easterly and westerly half of lot 18 conces sion 10 containing about so acres all in said township of esquesing and being more particularly described in mortgage no 14300 to the agricultural development board on said farm there is said to be erected a dwelling house with suitable farm buildings terms op sale tentynve per cent of the purchase money to be paid down at the time of the sale the balance to be secured by a mort gage with interest at four per cent per annum for further particulars and conditlanb of sale refer to w eric stewart kjc east block parliament bldgs toronto ontario solicitor to the mortgagee dated at toronto this 20th day of may 1938 if wood for sale choice beech and maple at 306 slngw cord mixed ralls s3l50 per cord mixed wood sub per card to zs3i a western farmer stopped at the bank to see if he could get a loan on his farm banker it might be arranged i will drive out with you andap praise it of farmer noticing a huge cloud dust rolling up the road you wont need to bother here it comes now picobac j brandford georgetown radio repairing 12 years experience we specialize on this work j sanford son phone- georgetown 34w em and now ever woman can afford to enjoy an electric range hydro thrift plan to mil ctttsem or georgetown and glen wuuams instantng electric ranges tne local hydro cwamtawon will make a grant of sz4m towards paying the extern coat of installing a threewire service where requir ed this offer is good antil august 1st ims range ajaot be pfcrchased from local dealers in georgetown tat order to secwre rvucao hphe modern electric sange is a perfect cook jl ends baking and roasting failures makes every meal a delicious success and its amazingly thrifty for example you can cook a meal elec trically for fest than vl person on the average then there are savings on food be cause your electric range never burns or scorches savings on your budget because yon can make tasty meals using inexpensive meats and leftovers savings on re decorating expense because flamelcss soot less electric cooking kecpa your kitchen so clean and fresh start cooking the fast clean cool electric way and save money todays range prices are very reasonable and the hydro thrift plan makes it easy to buy hugh lindpa moffat h c meclure general electric g r muckart westlnghonse and noi4nem eleethc j p reid mctlaryb richardsons hardware flndlay and tndhepe r h thompson a co nectarys and moffat hydro is your cheapest servant

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